Litcius/Paper detail

Ecological and Social Limitations for Mexican Dry Forest Restoration: A Systematic Review

Cristina Martínez‐Garza, Eliane Ceccon, Moisés Méndez‐Toribio

2022Sustainability12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In Mexico, dry forests are one of the ecosystems in major need of restoration intervention. Here, we explored the ecological and social limitations on the restoration of Mexican dry forests from the perspective of restoration practitioners and researchers. We included three data sources: (i) projects included in a national evaluation (1979–2016), (ii) a systematic review of scientific literature (1979–2021), and (iii) restoration projects included in two governmental programs. The national evaluation and the systematic review coincided in identifying the establishment of plantings as the most important ecological limitation and low social participation as the most important social limitation. There were three times more publications addressing ecological limitations than those addressing social limitations. We did not find research to resolve the problems faced by practitioners related to invasive species, unpredictable climate, and poor soil quality. Governmental programs promoting the restoration of ecosystems need to include measurable indicators to document the socioecological limitations faced by local practitioners to restore Mexican dry forests.

Topics & Concepts

Restoration ecologyForest restorationEnvironmental resource managementIntervention (counseling)Ecosystem servicesEnvironmental planningSystematic reviewForest ecologyEcologyGeographyEcosystemPolitical scienceEnvironmental sciencePsychologyMEDLINELawBiologyPsychiatryConservation, Biodiversity, and Resource ManagementEcology and Vegetation Dynamics StudiesEnvironmental and Cultural Studies in Latin America and Beyond