2021
DOI: 10.1111/ecog.05780
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Future restoration should enhance ecological complexity and emergent properties at multiple scales

Abstract: Ecological restoration has a paradigm of re-establishing 'indigenous reference' communities. One resulting concern is that focussing on target communities may not necessarily create systems which function at a high level or are resilient in the face of ongoing global change. Ecological complexity -defined here, based on theory, as the number of components in a system and the number of connections among themprovides a complementary aim, which can be measured directly and has several advantages. Ecological compl… Show more

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Cited by 51 publications
(54 citation statements)
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“…This is well aligned with the general framework for rewilding proposed by Perino et al (2019), which argues for restoration along trophic complexity, dispersal/connectivity and stochastic ecosystem disturbances, and the interactions between these ecological processes. In particular, this points towards the importance of recovering keystone species that promote the trophic complexity (in line with the trophic rewilding concept defined in Svenning et al 2016), the functional integrity and the ecological resilience of ecosystems, similarly highlighted in Bullock et al (2021). Rewilding can thus be seen sitting with a broader framework of restoration aiming at restoring ecologically complex ecosystems to promote functional integrity and resilience and higher landscape-scale biodiversity (Fernández et al 2017, Perino et al 2019, Svenning 2020, Carver et al 2021.…”
Section: Complexity As a Key Objective For Restorationmentioning
confidence: 79%
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“…This is well aligned with the general framework for rewilding proposed by Perino et al (2019), which argues for restoration along trophic complexity, dispersal/connectivity and stochastic ecosystem disturbances, and the interactions between these ecological processes. In particular, this points towards the importance of recovering keystone species that promote the trophic complexity (in line with the trophic rewilding concept defined in Svenning et al 2016), the functional integrity and the ecological resilience of ecosystems, similarly highlighted in Bullock et al (2021). Rewilding can thus be seen sitting with a broader framework of restoration aiming at restoring ecologically complex ecosystems to promote functional integrity and resilience and higher landscape-scale biodiversity (Fernández et al 2017, Perino et al 2019, Svenning 2020, Carver et al 2021.…”
Section: Complexity As a Key Objective For Restorationmentioning
confidence: 79%
“…Together, the studies of this Special Issue highlight how restoration initiatives in the Anthropocene should focus on conserving and promoting ecological complexity and emergent properties at multiple scales and nurturing the processes responsible for the long‐term maintenance of high biodiversity levels and ecological resilience (Bullock et al 2021, Mittelman et al 2021, Storch et al 2021). They emphasize the need for integrating pluralistic values of nature in restoration research and planning in order to find the required support to implement restoration at scale (Quintero‐Uribe et al 2022).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…It has gained attention for targeting the restoration of self‐sustaining complex ecosystems through recovering lost species interactions and ecosystem functions, while, at the same time, addressing societal benefits and challenges entailed by nature restoration. It builds on ideas of process‐oriented and open‐ended restoration as a means to achieve the recovery of ecosystem functions (Torres et al 2018, Jepson 2019, Van Meerbeek et al 2019, Bullock et al 2021).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%