Homogenizing biodiversity in restoration
Restoration can benefit biodiversity, but we should be concious of our biases towards easy-to-grow species.
By Josie Lesage, Elizabeth Howard, and Karen Holl in Restoration
Abstract
Restoration frequently aims to improve native species biodiversity at a site, but practitioners have limited resources. In diverse ecosystems, the selective use of certain guilds or species can come at the cost of species that are more challenging to incorporate,resulting in the overall homogenization of the ecosystem and a relative loss of biodiversity. We surveyed practitioners who restore California prairies to understand their use of native annual forbs, an important component of the biodiversity in this ecosystem. We found that practitioners preferentially planted native perennial species, mainly grasses. Despite practitioners’ recognition of the high conservation value of native annual forbs, they were hesitant to include this guild in their planting palettes because of high costs, low and unpredictable establishment, and lack of seed. We recommend that California annual prairie forbs be seeded in multiple years to enhance establishment, and that monitoring targets be designed to better reflect the high variability in interannual abundance of native annual forbs. These issues are not unique to California prairie, and more broadly, restoration objectives and research across a range of ecosystems should prioritize guilds that are more challenging to establish but are of high conservation concern.
Implications for Practice
- Restoration goals, practices, and research should incorporate a fuller suite of species, including those that are more challenging to propagate and establish, such as annual forbs in California prairies.
- Restoration objectives and monitoring should be tailored to reflect differences in life histories across plant guilds.
- Practitioners can employ several techniques to reduce the cost and risk associated with planting native annual forbs, such as seeding or planting in subportions of larger restoration projects, in years with high expected precipitation, or over multiple years.
Learn more
This paper is available online for free, here!
- Posted on:
- November 1, 2018
- Length:
- 2 minute read, 289 words
- Categories:
- Restoration
- Tags:
- Restoration