2004
DOI: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2004.00483.x
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Defining Conservation Strategies with Historical Perspectives: a Case Study from a Degraded Oak Grassland Ecosystem

Abstract: The restoration of degraded ecosystems can be constrained by uncertainty over former conditions and the relevance of the past given recent changes. It can be difficult to differentiate among contrasting hypotheses about past ecosystem function, and restoration efforts can emphasize species reestablishment without integrating the ecological and cultural processes that once determined their occurrence. As a case study, we analyzed historical descriptions of an endangered oak grassland ecosystem in southwestern B… Show more

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Cited by 96 publications
(78 citation statements)
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“…Species invasion has been severe, with 144 naturalized exotic plant species (32% of the regional flora) representing 55-75% of local species richness and 80-90% of biomass [15,16]. The overwhelming impression is that native species have all but been displaced by invasive species, with the inference being that the invaders are competitively dominant over resident natives.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Species invasion has been severe, with 144 naturalized exotic plant species (32% of the regional flora) representing 55-75% of local species richness and 80-90% of biomass [15,16]. The overwhelming impression is that native species have all but been displaced by invasive species, with the inference being that the invaders are competitively dominant over resident natives.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The overwhelming impression is that native species have all but been displaced by invasive species, with the inference being that the invaders are competitively dominant over resident natives. However, anthropogenic habitat alteration covaries strongly with invasion impacts [15,16], with only 1-5% of original habitat remaining and a history of long-term fire suppression [16]. Consequently, exotic dominance could have less to do with strong species interactions, such as competitive displacement, than with non-interactive processes, such as relative dispersal ability or altered disturbance regimes that are more limiting for native species than they are for invasive species [15,17,18].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many researchers (Boyd 1986;Tveten and Fonda 1999), and accounts in historical journal materials (British Columbia Historical Society 1974;Dougan 1973;Duffus 2003;The Pioneer 1986) have concluded that aboriginal people used fire to manage food resources, most notably to increase yields of root vegetables (i.e., Camas), berries, seeds (Turner 1999), and forage species (Agee 1993;Turner 1999). Empirical evidence suggests that, on southeastern Vancouver Island and the Gulf Islands, this has been the case for millennia (MacDougall et al 2004). The aboriginal population in the Salish Sea region of BC (Fig.…”
Section: Fire and Humans In Garry Oak Ecosystemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These papers have highlighted pressing conservation issues such as landscape fragmentation, invasive species, herbivory, and the role of aboriginal land management using fire (MacDougall et al 2004;Gedalof et al 2006;Lea 2006;Pellatt et al 2007;Gonzales and Arcese 2008;Dunwiddie et al 2011;Bennett et al 2012). Unfortunately there seems to be a global disconnect between academic research and actual ecosystem restoration activities (Suding 2011).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, oak systems are culturally valued throughout the world (Hougner et al 2006, Fisher and Bliss 2008, Acacio et al 2010. As a result, Oregon white oaks are the subject of significant restoration and protection efforts throughout their range (Larsen and Morgan 1998, Fuchs 2001, MacDougall et al 2004. In Pierce and Thurston counties, Washington, oak stands are designated as critical areas and therefore receive special protection during the development process (Pierce County, Ord.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%