| Literature DB >> 33282566 |
M Florencia Miguel1, H Scott Butterfield2, Christopher J Lortie3,4.
Abstract
Restoration of agricultural drylands globally, here farmlands and grazing lands, is a priority for ecosystem function and biodiversity preservation. Natural areas in drylands are recognized as biodiversity hotspots and face continued human impacts. Global water shortages are driving increased agricultural land retirement providing the opportunity to reclaim some of these lands for natural habitat. We used meta-analysis to contrast different classes of dryland restoration practices. All interventions were categorized as active and passive for the analyses of efficacy in dryland agricultural ecosystems. We evaluated the impact of 19 specific restoration practices from 42 studies on soil, plant, animal, and general habitat targets across 16 countries, for a total of 1,427 independent observations. Passive vegetation restoration and grazing exclusion led to net positive restoration outcomes. Passive restoration practices were more variable and less effective than active restoration practices. Furthermore, passive soil restoration led to net negative restoration outcomes. Active restoration practices consistently led to positive outcomes for soil, plant, and habitat targets. Water supplementation was the most effective restoration practice. These findings suggest that active interventions are necessary and critical in most instances for dryland agricultural ecosystems likely because of severe anthropogenic pressures and concurrent environmental stressors-both past and present.Entities:
Keywords: Agricultural drylands; Deserts; Human-modified ecosystems; Intervention; Meta-analysis; Restoration
Year: 2020 PMID: 33282566 PMCID: PMC7690292 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.10428
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses) flowchart. PRISMA report of a meta-analysis comparing active vs passive restoration practices in dryland agricultural ecosystems globally.
Figure 2Frequency of terminologies referring to agricultural land uses in dryland ecosystems.
Different terms were applied in studies included in the meta-analysis comparing active and passive restoration practices in agricultural dryland ecosystems globally. These terminologies were grouped into a single term—“agricultural dryland ecosystems”, including farmlands (cultivation, farmland, agricultural land, cropland, agriculture, and agricultural field) and grazing lands (grazing and overgrazing terms).
List of crop and animal grazer species in farmlands and grazing lands prior to the implementation of active and passive restoration practices in dryland agricultural ecosystems globally.
Each restoration practice was categorized as active or passive. Different practices were grouped into general categories based on their primary focus, for example those related with plant interventions such as planting or seeding, were included within the vegetation category.
| Farmlands | Grazing lands | Restoration | Category of practices | Practices |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| cattle | Active | vegetation | seeding | |
| water supplementation | water supplementation | |||
| not listed in studies | soil | carbon addition | ||
| sheep and goat | Passive | vegetation | natural recovery | |
| – | livestock | grazing exclusion | grazing exclusion | |
| – | soil | natural recovery |
Figure 3Global distribution of studies evaluating restoration practices in dryland agricultural ecosystems (n = 42).
Restoration practices included in the meta-analysis were classified into active or passive. Dark gray points represent the location of studies that used active restoration practices. Lighter gray points represent the location of studies that used passive restoration practices.
Distribution of studies evaluating restoration practices in dryland agricultural ecosystems.
List of countries (n = 16) included in the meta-analysis, their active or passive restoration focus and the restoration practice implemented. Different restoration practices were grouped into general categories based on their primary focus, for example those related with plant interventions such as planting or seeding, were included within the vegetation category.
| Country | Restoration | Category of practices | Data entries |
|---|---|---|---|
| Argentina | Active | vegetation | 13 |
| Passive | vegetation | 10 | |
| Australia | Active | vegetation | 12 |
| Canada | Active | vegetation | 30 |
| China | Active | vegetation | 622 |
| water supplementation | 12 | ||
| Passive | grazing exclusion | 30 | |
| soil | 204 | ||
| vegetation | 42 | ||
| Egypt | Passive | vegetation | 21 |
| Ethiopia | Passive | grazing exclusion | 5 |
| Hungary | Active | soil | 27 |
| Iran | Passive | vegetation | 15 |
| Kenya | Active | vegetation | 7 |
| Kuwait | Passive | vegetation | 10 |
| Mongolia | Active | vegetation | 24 |
| Passive | vegetation | 37 | |
| Portugal | Passive | grazing exclusion | 21 |
| Russia | Passive | soil | 4 |
| South Africa | Active | vegetation | 9 |
| Spain | Active | soil | 128 |
| United States of America | Active | vegetation | 57 |
| water supplementation | 63 | ||
| Passive | vegetation | 24 |
List of restoration practices, desired restoration goals (i.e., outcomes) and original response variables included in the meta-analysis.
Data was used to compare active vs passive restoration practices in dryland agricultural ecosystems globally (n = 42 and 1,427 independent observations or data entries). Different practices were grouped into general categories based on their primary focus, for example, those related with plant interventions such as planting or seeding, were included within the vegetation category. The outcomes listed describe restoration goals from each restoration practice; the habitat classification includes studies that reported measures of both soil and vegetation recovery or of vegetation community structure.
| Restoration | Category of practices | Practices | Outcomes | Response variables | Data entries |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Active | soil | carbon amendment | soil | moss cover; soil nutrient content | 27 |
| mycorrhizal inoculation | vegetation | plant biomass; nutrient | 128 | ||
| vegetation | burning, mowing | habitat | soil nutrient content and soil properties | 24 | |
| mechanical disturbance, seeding | vegetation | plant cover and density | 4 | ||
| planting | habitat | plant biomass, density, cover, diversity and richness; soil nutrient | 369 | ||
| planting | vegetation | plant height and cover; invertebrate and lizard abundance, diversity, dominance, evenness and richness | 26 | ||
| planting | soil | soil nutrient content and soil properties | 84 | ||
| planting | animals | invertebrate abundance, diversity and richness | 6 | ||
| planting, grazing exclusion | animals | arthropod abundance, richness and diversity; soil properties; plant cover, density, height and richness | 24 | ||
| seeding | vegetation | plant cover and density; seedling emergence and establishment | 53 | ||
| seeding | soil | soil nutrient content and soil properties | 117 | ||
| seeding and ripping | vegetation | plant cover and abundance | 12 | ||
| seeding, gypsum and organic mulch | habitat | soil properties; seedling emergence and surviving plants | 9 | ||
| seeding, irrigation | vegetation | seedling emergence | 7 | ||
| seeding, mowing and herbicide, mulching | habitat | plant cover and richness; soil nutrient content and soil properties | 18 | ||
| seeding, mulching, weeding | vegetation | plant cover | 6 | ||
| seeding, safe sites for seeds, fencing | vegetation | plant cover and biomass | 8 | ||
| seeding, soil tilling, fertilization | vegetation | plant biomass | 7 | ||
| water supplementation | irrigation, seeding | vegetation | plant cover, abundance, biomass, density and survival | 63 | |
| water supply | habitat | plant biomass, density, cover, evenness, productivity and richness; soil nutrient content | 12 | ||
| Passive | grazing exclusion | fencing | vegetation | plant height, cover and diversity | 21 |
| grazing exclusion | vegetation | plant height, cover, diversity, biomass and richness | 8 | ||
| natural recovery | vegetation | plant biomass, cover, density, height | 27 | ||
| soil | mycorrhizal recovery | soil | microbial richness and density | 6 | |
| natural recovery | soil | soil nutrient content and soil properties | 202 | ||
| vegetation | facilitation | habitat | soil nutrient content and soil properties; plant survival, biomass, height, width, abundance, and richness | 60 | |
| natural recovery | habitat | soil nutrient content and soil properties; plant richness | 40 | ||
| natural recovery | animals | arthropod density, diversity and richness | 3 | ||
| natural recovery | soil | soil properties | 18 | ||
| fencing | habitat | plant biomass, evenness, cover, density, diversity, height and richness; soil nutrient content and soil properties | 15 | ||
| grazing exclusion | vegetation | plant cover, density, height, biomass and richness | 23 |
The effect of active and passive restoration practices and restoration outcomes evaluated in dryland agricultural—here, defined as farmlands and grazing lands—ecosystems globally.
The log response ratio (effect size) and 95% confidence interval (CI) were calculated from random effects models (Lortie, C.J. and Miguel, M.F. 2019. R code, DOI 10.5281/zenodo.3907012). Effect of active and passive restoration practices was tested by t-test against a value of 0, and restoration practices and outcomes were considered significant if their estimated 95% confidence intervals did not overlap 0. (A) Random effects model results comparing restoration practices. (B) Random effects model results comparing restoration outcomes. Outcomes describe target goals from each restoration practice; the habitat category includes studies that reported measures of both soil and vegetation restoration or general community structure.
| Restoration | Log response ratio | 95% CI |
|---|---|---|
| (A) | ||
| Active practices | 0.34 | [0.27–0.42] |
| Water supplementation | 0.64 | [0.55–0.73] |
| Soil | 0.56 | [0.54–0.57] |
| Vegetation | 0.19 | [0.18–0.21] |
| Passive practices | −0.29 | [−0.36 to −0.21] |
| Soil | −0.74 | [−0.81 to −0.68] |
| Vegetation | 0.23 | [0.18–0.28] |
| Grazing exclusion | 0.13 | [0.06–0.20] |
| (B) | ||
| Active restoration outcomes | ||
| Vegetation | 0.50 | [0.49–0.52] |
| Soil | 0.28 | [0.21–0.35] |
| Habitat | 0.10 | [0.09–0.12] |
| Animals | −0.11 | [−0.113 to −0.112] |
| Passive restoration outcomes | ||
| Soil | −0.68 | [−0.74 to −0.62] |
| Vegetation | 0.29 | [0.23–0.35] |
| Habitat | 0.13 | [0.07–0.19] |
| Animals | 1.05 | [−0.21 to 2.31] |
Figure 4Log response ratio (effect size) and 95% confidence intervals for active and passive restoration practices in agricultural dryland ecosystems.
The dashed vertical line denotes no effect of restoration practices, or a mean of zero. A positive log response ratio value indicates the mean of the restoration practice was higher than that of the reference condition and a negative value indicates the mean of the reference condition was higher than that of the restoration practice. The p-values are from random effect models comparing subgroups differences among restoration practices.