Litcius/Paper detail

Bionovelty and ecological restoration

John P. Volpe, Eric Higgs, Jonathan M. Jeschke, Katie Barnhill, Conrad G. Brunk, Joan Dudney, Laura L. Govers, Richard J. Hobbs, Karen Keenleyside, Stephen D. Murphy, Philip J. Seddon, Jayce Sudweeks, Orkan Telhan, Sonia A. Voicescu

2024Restoration Ecology18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Anthropogenic activity has irreparably altered the ecological fabric of Earth. The emergence of ecological novelty from diverse drivers of change is an increasingly challenging dimension of ecosystem restoration. At the same time, the restorationist's tool kit continues to grow, including a variety of powerful and increasingly prevalent technologies. Thus, ecosystem restoration finds itself at the center of intersecting challenges. How should we respond to increasingly common emergence of environmental system states with little or no historical precedent, whilst considering the appropriate deployment of potentially consequential and largely untested interventions that may give rise to organisms, system states, and/or processes that are likewise without historical precedent? We use the term bionovelty to encapsulate these intersecting themes and examine the implications of bionovelty for ecological restoration.

Topics & Concepts

Software deploymentRestoration ecologyVariety (cybernetics)NoveltyNovel ecosystemEnvironmental resource managementEcologyEcosystemEnvironmental restorationEcosystem servicesEnvironmental scienceComputer scienceBiologyPhilosophyTheologyArtificial intelligenceOperating systemEcosystem dynamics and resilienceInnovation, Sustainability, Human-Machine SystemsSustainability and Climate Change Governance