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Assessing innovations for upscaling forest landscape restoration

Leland K. Werden, Rebecca J. Cole, Katrin Schönhofer, Karen D. Holl, Rakan A. Zahawi, Colin Averill, Daniella Schweizer, Julio Calvo‐Alvarado, Debra A. Hamilton, Francis H. Joyce, Miriam San‐José, Florian Hofhansl, Lilly Briggs, David R. Rodriguez, Jeffrey W. Tingle, Fidel Chiriboga‐Arroyo, Eben N. Broadbent, Gerald J. Quirós-Cedeño, Thomas W. Crowther

2024One Earth13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

There is an increasing urgency to implement large-scale ecosystem restoration to mitigate the biodiversity and climate crises. These efforts must be scaled up to counteract the widespread degradation of the world's forests, although restoration costs can often limit their application. Thus, there is a pressing need to identify cost-effective approaches that catalyze landscape-scale ecological recovery. Here, we highlight seven assisted restoration innovations with demonstrated local-scale results that, once upscaled, hold promise to rapidly regenerate forests. We comprehensively assessed how each approach facilitated forest, woodland, and/or mangrove recovery across 143 studies. Our results reveal techniques with a marked ability to catalyze vegetation recovery compared to "business-as-usual" approaches. However, the context-dependent cost-benefit ratio and feasibility of applying particular approaches requires careful consideration. Our assessment emphasizes that we already have many of the tools necessary to drive the terrestrial restoration movement forward. It is time to implement and assess their efficacy at scale.

Topics & Concepts

Environmental resource managementForest restorationEnvironmental scienceGeographyForest ecologyEcologyEcosystemBiologyForest Management and PolicyLand Use and Ecosystem ServicesForest Ecology and Biodiversity Studies
Assessing innovations for upscaling forest landscape restoration | Litcius