Ecological restoration in the world Presentation

GundeepSingh66 14 views 35 slides Jun 23, 2024
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About This Presentation

How to restore the Ecological System


Slide Content

Restoration Ecology

CB 54.17
Carbon cycle
Fig 54.14

CO
2and other greenhouse gases keep heat
from radiating back into space
http://www.esr.org/outreach/climate_change/basics/basics.html

Ecological Restoration and Global
Climate Change
J. Harris, R. Hobbs, E. Higgs, and J. Aronson
Restoration Ecology Vol. 14, No. 2, pg. 170–
176 June 2006

Mismatches –an example
•Great tit (relative of
the chickadee)
•Common in Europe
•Studied in detail
since the 1950’s by
scientists at the
Netherlands
Institute of
Ecology.
Information: Grossman, D. 2003, Spring Forward, Scientific American, 85-91.
http://www.sciencenewsforkids.org/articles/20030723/a106_1511.jpg

•Tits lay eggs at the same time that they did in 1985 –
mid-spring (~4/16 to 5/15)
•Since ~1985 spring temperatures have risen about 2
o
C
•Tits primary food is the winter moth caterpillar (below)
•Caterpillar production is 2 weeks earlier in 2002 than in
1985
Grossman, D. 2003, Spring Forward, Scientific American, 85-91.

Grossman, D. 2003, Spring Forward, Scientific American, 85-91.

Restoring a disturbed ecosystem to historical
conditions may not be valid as ecosystems
change.

It is increasingly likely that the next century
will be characterized by shifts in global
weather patterns and climate regimes.
precipitation
changes

The past is no longer a prescriptive guide for
what might happen in the future.
precipitation
changes

What are the two most basic resources
necessary for biodiversity?

Restoring ecosystems must begin with the
basics: water and space

Truckee River, Nevada-Water diversions
reduced flow. Increased flows during willow
and cottonwood seed release season allowed
recovery of riparian ecosystem.

Kissimmee River, Florida-Had been turned
into a 90 km canal. About 24 km of the river
has been restored.

Rhine River, Europe-dredging for ships
reduced biodiversity. Side channels are being
reintroduced to allow species to recover.

Water cycle
Fig 54.13

Stream restoration in urban catchments
through redesigning stormwater systems:
looking to the catchment to save the stream
C. Walsh, T. Fletcher, and A. Ladson
J. N. Am. Benthol. Soc., 2005, 24(3):690–705

Restoration of streams degraded by urbanization has
usually been attempted by enhancement of instream
habitat or riparian zones.

Restoration of streams
degraded by urbanization
has usually been attempted
by enhancement of
instream habitat or riparian
zones.

Restoration of streams degraded by urbanization has
usually been attempted by enhancement of instream
habitat or riparian zones.

Recent studies of
urban impacts on
streams in Melbourne,
Australia, on water
chemistry, algal
biomass, diatoms and
invertebrates, suggest
that the primary
degrading process to
streams in many urban
areas is effective
imperviousness.

The direct connection of impervious surfaces to
streams means that even small rainfall events can
produce sufficient surface runoff to cause frequent
disturbance.

Where impervious surfaces are not directly
connected to streams, small rainfall events are
intercepted and infiltrated.

http://www.brevstorm.org/watershed.cfm

http://www.brevstorm.org/watershed.cfm
A wet retention pond to filter pollutants and
buffer and maintain stream flow

http://www.brevstorm.org/watershed.cfm
Roadside swales can increase water filtration

http://www.brevstorm.org/watershed.cfm
Inlet screens
for filtering
large debris

http://www.brevstorm.org/watershed.cfm
Baffle boxes
to remove
sediment

Restoration of streams
degraded by
urbanization has usually
been attempted by
enhancement of
instream habitat or
riparian zones.

The use of alternative drainage methods, which
maintain a near-natural frequency of surface
runoff from the catchment, is the best approach
to stream restoration in urban areas.

Stream restoration in urban catchments
through redesigning stormwater systems:
looking to the catchment to save the stream