| Literature DB >> 30348877 |
Aurora Torres1,2, Néstor Fernández3,2, Sophus Zu Ermgassen3,2,4, Wouter Helmer5, Eloy Revilla6, Deli Saavedra5, Andrea Perino3,2, Anne Mimet3,7, José M Rey-Benayas8, Nuria Selva9, Frans Schepers5, Jens-Christian Svenning10,11, Henrique M Pereira3,2,12.
Abstract
Rewilding is emerging as a promising restoration strategy to enhance the conservation status of biodiversity and promote self-regulating ecosystems while re-engaging people with nature. Overcoming the challenges in monitoring and reporting rewilding projects would improve its practical implementation and maximize its conservation and restoration outcomes. Here, we present a novel approach for measuring and monitoring progress in rewilding that focuses on the ecological attributes of rewilding. We devised a bi-dimensional framework for assessing the recovery of processes and their natural dynamics through (i) decreasing human forcing on ecological processes and (ii) increasing ecological integrity of ecosystems. The rewilding assessment framework incorporates the reduction of material inputs and outputs associated with human management, as well as the restoration of natural stochasticity and disturbance regimes, landscape connectivity and trophic complexity. Furthermore, we provide a list of potential activities for increasing the ecological integrity after reviewing the evidence for the effectiveness of common restoration actions. For illustration purposes, we apply the framework to three flagship restoration projects in the Netherlands, Switzerland and Argentina. This approach has the potential to broaden the scope of rewilding projects, facilitate sound decision-making and connect the science and practice of rewilding.This article is part of the theme issue 'Trophic rewilding: consequences for ecosystems under global change'.Entities:
Keywords: biodiversity; ecological processes; ecosystem integrity; ecosystem management; monitoring; restoration
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30348877 PMCID: PMC6231071 DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2017.0433
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci ISSN: 0962-8436 Impact factor: 6.237
Figure 1.Bi-dimensional space representing the condition of the system along axes of human input and output forcing (H) and ecological integrity of ecosystems (E). Background colours represent the values of the rewilding score quantified through equation (2.3). (a) Conceptual illustration showing the position of common land uses in this bi-dimensional naturalness space. (b) Scheme of how changes in either dimension can lead to changes in overall system condition, although improvements in both dimensions are typically required to maximize the rewilding score. (Online version in colour.)
List of pressure and state variables and indicators proposed for measuring rewilding progress and associated restoration actions. The scores are assigned in a continuous scale from 0 to 1. Reference values provide guidance for expert assessments (further details in electronic supplementary material, table S1). Effectiveness of restoration actions (EF) for achieving rewilding objectives—namely, to restore trophic processes, landscape connectivity, natural disturbance regimes and/or biodiversity—was based upon the review of evidence (electronic supplementary material, table S2) inspired by the Conservation Evidence approach (www.conservationevidence.com) [33], where EF = 0: no evidence or unknown effectiveness of restoration action; EF = 1: likely to be ineffective; EF = 2: trade-off between benefit and harm; EF = 3: likely to be beneficial; EF = 4: beneficial.
| pressure and state variables | indicator | score | restoration action | EF |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| artificial feeding of wildlife | is artificial feeding of animals allowed, and how influential is it on ecological processes? | 0—no artificial feeding; 0.5—some type of artificial feeding is provided at levels unlikely to significantly affect animal movements, species diet, seed dispersal and other ecological processes; 1—high levels of artificial feeding and/or evidence for feeding affecting ecological processes (e.g. artificial food is an important component in the diet of a species) | reduce to a minimum or eliminate any type of artificial feeding that may potentially influence animal behaviour and ecology | 2 |
| population reinforcement | have any animals been (re-)introduced into the area within the last years? | 0—no population reinforcement at least during the last year; 0.5—species populations of conservation concern sporadically reinforced to improve their conservation status; 1—regular to intensive population reinforcement for the conservation of populations that would otherwise decline, or reinforcement of non-declining populations or populations of no conservation concern | establish self-sustaining populations so that further population reinforcement is unnecessary | 0 |
| agricultural production | cropland area and farming intensity | reducing farming intensity and extent (land abandonment) | 2 | |
| forestry production | forest area dedicated to forestry production (e.g. wood, timber, pulp) and forest management intensity | cessation and/or reduced harvesting. This should prioritize old-growth forest | 4 | |
| grasslands production | grassland area dedicated to hay and livestock production and intensity of production. Free-roaming wild ungulates do not count towards this indicator | reducing mowing and ploughing in grasslands, and reducing livestock intensity | 2 | |
| mining | area devoted to mining and intensity of the impacts of mining on the ecosystem | reduce mining and mining impacts | 3 | |
| harvesting of terrestrial wildlife | is hunting allowed? To what extent is the ecosystem affected by hunting? | 0—no hunting; 0.5—low levels of hunting unlikely to significantly affect the growth rates of wildlife populations, animal movements, or other species with which hunted species interact; 1—high levels of hunting and/or probable or demonstrated effects on the growth rates and/or the population structure of harvested populations or species interactions | restriction of hunting | 4 |
| harvesting of aquatic wildlife | is extractive fishing allowed? To what extent is the ecosystem affected by extractive fishing? | 0—no extractive fishing; 0.5—fishing only in artificial ponds or low levels of extractive fishing unlikely to significantly affect the growth rates of wildlife populations, animal movements, or species with which fished species interact; 1—high levels of extractive fishing and/or probable or demonstrated effects on the growth rates and/or the population structure of harvested populations or species interactions | restriction of extractive fishing | 4 |
| carrion removal | does regulation permit leaving medium and large carcasses in the field? | 0—carcasses from wild animals and extensive livestock are left in the field; 0.5—carcasses of wildlife are left in the field, those from extensive livestock are removed; 1—all carcasses are removed from the field | legislative change to permit leaving carcasses in the field | 2 |
| deadwood removal | is deadwood (dead trees and woody debris) removed? | 0—no deadwood removal; 0.5—Low levels of deadwood removal (e.g. on roads and footpaths) unlikely to affect disturbance regime, animal movements and other ecological processes significantly; 1—high levels of deadwood removal | allowing deadwood to remain in the forest | 3 |
| disturbance regimes | ||||
| natural avalanche and/or rock slide regimes | are avalanche and/or rock slide regimes regulated? | 0—regulation of avalanches and/or rock slides across the whole rewilding area; 0.5—avalanches and/or rock slides only in certain places with risk for human life; 1—no regulation of the avalanche and/or rock slide regime | restoring the natural regime of avalanches and rock slides | 3 |
| natural fire regimes | are there deviations of the natural fire regime due to human pressures (this might be in either direction, i.e. fire suppression, or prescribed burning)? | 0—fire regime heavily modified by human intervention including both artificial burning and/or fire suppression; 0.5—artificial burning and/or fire suppression is very localized and only cause minor ecological impacts; 1—there are no deviations of the natural fire regime | restoring the natural regime of fires, including restoration and/or natural regeneration of native fire-dependent vegetation | 3 |
| natural hydrological regimes | are hydrological regimes (including flood regimes) heavily modified? | 0—high regulation of the natural hydrological regime; 0.5—dams in place, but cause only minor impacts on the overall hydrological regime; 1—no regulation of the hydrological regime | restoring the natural hydrological regime (e.g. removing dykes, channels, dams) | 3 |
| natural pest regimes and mortality events | are natural pest regimes and mortality events regulated? Are management actions implemented after mortality events (e.g. storms, pests)? | 0—management actions implemented to avoid pests (e.g. pesticide or vaccination use) or after mortality events (e.g. salvage logging, removal of burnt wood); 0.5—low levels of management to avoid pests or after mortality events, unlikely to affect disturbance regime, animal movements and other ecological processes significantly; 1—no management to avoid pests or after mortality events | passive restoration after mortality events (e.g. avoiding pesticide use) and avoid acting against natural pests | 2 |
| landscape connectivity and composition | ||||
| terrestrial landscape fragmentation | to what extent is the landscape fragmented by human infrastructure? What is the effective mesh size [ | 0—landscape highly fragmented (fully covered with heavily used infrastructure); 0.5—landscape crossed by low-traffic roads and infrastructure; 1—landscape not fragmented | restoring connectivity including removing, bundling or reducing the extent of linear transport infrastructure and built-up areas (excluding abandoned buildings) | 4 |
| aquatic landscapes fragmentation | to what extent are migratory processes in river systems allowed? | 0—fish migration fully impeded; 0.5—dams in place but alternative migration routes or fish cannons provided; 1—no regulation of fish migration | restoring aquatic habitat connectivity | 4 |
| spontaneous vegetation dynamics | what is the state of natural regeneration? | allowing natural succession | 4 | |
| harmful invasive species | what is the impact of harmful invasive species on the rewilding area? | 0—very severe impacts of invasive species on ecological communities in the rewilding area; 0.5—impacts of invasive species within small, localized communities within the rewilding area; 1—no major invasive species present | removal of harmful invasive species | 3 |
| trophic processes | ||||
| terrestrial large-bodied fauna (greater than 5 kg) | species composition of large-bodied (greater than 5 kg) species | recovery of large-bodied species | 3 | |
Overview of the three rewilding projects used as case studies sorted by increasing size.
| project | ecological description | initial sources of degradation | main restoration actions developed | ecological responses |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Millingerwaard (The Netherlands) | naturalized floodplain, matrix of grasslands, cropland and wetlands | use of land for agriculture. dykes to reduce the flooding risk | dyke removal, restoration of natural hydrological regime, release of Konik horses ( | recovery of riverine vegetation and ecological communities. Surplus of horses and bovines relocated away annually. Recovery of ecosystem engineers such as wild boar ( |
| Swiss National Park (Switzerland) | large extent of alpine and subalpine habitats, including | before 1914, the area was widely used for timber production and alpine farming | IUCN category 1A nature reserve, affording strict protection to all natural ecological processes in the park (except fire, which is suppressed in most of the park). Reintroductions of the ibex ( | uninhibited succession across the park, but subalpine grasslands are kept open at least partly through natural browsing [ |
| Iberá (Argentina) | Rain-fed wetland, with | hunting of large terrestrial animals to extinction, grazing by livestock, burning of rangelands and logging of trees for timber | multiple reintroductions including giant anteaters ( | successful reintroductions of large animal species have led to recovery of viable populations, and restrictions on agriculture have promoted recovery within remnant forest fragments. Recovery of resident populations of marsh deer ( |
Figure 2.Panel showing the results of applying the rewilding assessment framework to three projects, namely the Millingerwaard project (the Netherlands); the Swiss National Park (Switzerland); and the Iberá project (Argentina). (a) Scores obtained for the variables at the beginning of the project and at present. A description of the variables and indicators is available in table 1 and electronic supplementary material, table S1. (b) Representation of the estimated scores of direct human inputs and outputs (H) and ecological integrity of ecosystems (E) in the bi-dimensional framework for each case study. d variables represent the naturalness of disturbances and stochastic events, c variables represent landscape composition and connectivity and t variable represents the trophic complexity. The arrows indicate the trajectory of change from the beginning of the projects to present. The rewilding score (R) is placed next to each point in time and has been calculated on the basis of the scores shown in (a). Photographs courtesy of Rijkswaterstaat, SNP/H. Lozza and N. Fernández. (Online version in colour.)