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- Title
Review of ESA SYMP 7: A Dynamic Perspective on Ecosystem Restoration–Establishing Temporal Connectivity at the Intersection Between Paleoecology and Restoration Ecology.
- Authors
Reid, Rachel E. B.; McGuire, Jenny L.; Svenning, Jens‐Christian; Wingard, G. Lynn; Moreno‐Mateos, David
- Abstract
To address this second question, McGuire considered the climate connectivity of natural land areas and found that, given projected climate change, organisms living in just 41% of natural patches will be able to track changing climate through adjacent natural land areas (McGuire et al. 2016). The greater Everglades ecosystem has been evolving and changing over the last 5000 years in response to climate and sea level, so attempts to restore the ecosystem that does not account for these natural shifts revealed in the paleontologic record will not be sustainable and will result in additional costs. Review of ESA SYMP 7: A Dynamic Perspective on Ecosystem Restoration-Establishing Temporal Connectivity at the Intersection Between Paleoecology and Restoration Ecology Landscape connectivity is vital not only spatially, but also temporally; as ecosystems change, it is important to be aware of past, present, and future variables that may impact ecosystem function and biodiversity.
- Subjects
RESTORATION ecology; ECOSYSTEMS; PALEOECOLOGY; CLIMATE change forecasts; BIOLOGICAL extinction; BIOTIC communities; ESTUARIES; SPATIAL ecology
- Publication
Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America, 2022, Vol 103, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
2327-6096
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/bes2.1954