AI Article Synopsis

  • A meta-analysis of 133 studies shows that natural regeneration outperforms active restoration in achieving biodiversity and vegetation structure success in tropical forests.
  • Natural regeneration leads to higher restoration success rates (34-56% for biodiversity and 19-56% for vegetation structure) compared to active restoration when key environmental factors are considered.
  • The study challenges the belief that active restoration is superior, suggesting that future restoration policies should incorporate conditions that enhance the effectiveness of both approaches while considering socioeconomic factors.

Article Abstract

Is active restoration the best approach to achieve ecological restoration success (the return to a reference condition, that is, old-growth forest) when compared to natural regeneration in tropical forests? Our meta-analysis of 133 studies demonstrated that natural regeneration surpasses active restoration in achieving tropical forest restoration success for all three biodiversity groups (plants, birds, and invertebrates) and five measures of vegetation structure (cover, density, litter, biomass, and height) tested. Restoration success for biodiversity and vegetation structure was 34 to 56% and 19 to 56% higher in natural regeneration than in active restoration systems, respectively, after controlling for key biotic and abiotic factors (forest cover, precipitation, time elapsed since restoration started, and past disturbance). Biodiversity responses were based primarily on ecological metrics of abundance and species richness (74%), both of which take far less time to achieve restoration success than similarity and composition. This finding challenges the widely held notion that natural forest regeneration has limited conservation value and that active restoration should be the default ecological restoration strategy. The proposition that active restoration achieves greater restoration success than natural regeneration may have arisen because previous comparisons lacked controls for biotic and abiotic factors; we also did not find any difference between active restoration and natural regeneration outcomes for vegetation structure when we did not control for these factors. Future policy priorities should align the identified patterns of biophysical and ecological conditions where each or both restoration approaches are more successful, cost-effective, and compatible with socioeconomic incentives for tropical forest restoration.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5677348PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.1701345DOI Listing

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