Using Biological Criteria for Establishing Restoration and Ecological Recovery Endpoints

2002 ◽  
pp. 103-118
2002 ◽  
pp. 83-96
Author(s):  
Edward Rankin ◽  
Ronda Dufour ◽  
Thomas Simon ◽  
Steven Newhouse

2021 ◽  
pp. 146801812110191
Author(s):  
William Hynes

New economic thinking and acting through a systemic approach could outline policy alternatives to tackle the global-scale systemic challenges of financial, economic, social and environmental emergencies, and help steer our recovery out of the current crisis. A systemic recovery requires an economic approach that balances several factors - markets and states, efficiency and resilience, growth and sustainability, national and global stability, short-term emergency measures and long-term structural change. To achieve this, we need to think beyond our policy silos, comprehend our interconnections, and build resilience into our systems.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (14) ◽  
pp. 7646
Author(s):  
Ed Shaw ◽  
Debbie Coldwell ◽  
Anthony Cox ◽  
Matt Duffy ◽  
Chris Firth ◽  
...  

Research on urban rivers often seeks to find commonalities to advance knowledge of the effect of urbanisation on rivers, and rightly so. But it is important, also, to develop a complementary understanding of how urban rivers can be distinct, to facilitate a more nuanced view of concepts such as the ‘urban river syndrome’ and of the challenges facing those who wish to create more sustainable urban river corridors. To this end we use the Don Catchment as a case study to illustrate how historic patterns of urbanisation have been fundamental in shaping the catchment’s rivers. Following the Industrial Revolution, the catchment became an industrial centre, resulting in the ecological death of river ecosystems, and the disconnection of communities from stark urban river corridors. Widescale deindustrialisation in the 1970s and 1980s then resulted in a partial ecological recovery of the rivers, and ignited public interest. This history has imbued the catchment’s urban river corridors with a distinctive industrial character that can vary greatly between and within settlements. It has also left a legacy of particular issues, including a high degree of river habitat fragmentation and physical modification, and of negative perceptions of the rivers, which need improving to realise their potential as assets to local communities.


1987 ◽  
Vol 63 (6) ◽  
pp. 446-450 ◽  
Author(s):  
James E. Wood ◽  
Richard Raper

In the alternate strip clearcutting system, first-cut strips are regenerated by seed produced by black spruce (Picea mariana [Mill.] B.S.P.) in the forested leave strips. However, after the second cut, such a seed source is not available for regenerating the leave strips. Therefore, the forest manager must consider a number of alternative regeneration options. The selection of the most appropriate regeneration option is dependent upon several economic and biological criteria. These include future costs of delivered wood, site productivity, post-harvest site condition, future alternative sources of supply, and future demand for industrial wood. Regeneration options such as preservation of advance growth and direct seeding are recommended for sites on which the manager is concerned primarily with regenerating first cut strips and is willing to accept a lower level of stocking in leave strips. Planting, the most intensive option discussed, should be reserved for sites offering the highest potential return or greatest future cost savings. Direct seeding of jack pine (Pinus banksiana Lamb.) should be considered on the upland portions of this patterned site type. Mixing jack pine and black spruce is a suggested regeneration option if the site contains both upland and lowland topographic positions. Other seeding options include the use of semi-transparent plastic seed shelters. The manager might consider combining two or more of these options to meet management objectives.


2012 ◽  
Vol 157-158 ◽  
pp. 945-949 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yu Hui Chen ◽  
Yong Zhang ◽  
Min Sheng Huang ◽  
Yi Fan Zhang ◽  
Feng Zhao ◽  
...  

By constructing a multistage floating-bed system by combination of macrophytes, aquatic animals and aquamats ecobase for ecolgical restoration in a eutrophic urban river, the improvement of water quality and the dynamic variation of phytoplankton was investigated. The results showed that the average removal rates were 9.85%, 15.86%, 24.47% and 12.75%, respectively. phytoplankton quantity was decreased by 22.82×104ind./L and Shannon-Weiner Index was increased by 0.11 averagely, after the restoration work in the demonstration area comparing to control area. The negative correlation between Shannon-Weiner Index of phytoplankton and TN(-0.77, P<0.01) showed that multistage system might effect phytoplankton indirectly through removing nutrients from river, which indicated that the employment of ecological restoration technology of multistage floating-bed system was effective in raising the ecological recovery efficiency of polluted water bodies.


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