Comparing herbaceous plant communities in active and passive riparian restoration.

Understanding the efficacy of passive (reduction or cessation of environmental stress) and active (typically involving planting or seeding) restoration strategies is important for the design of successful revegetation of degraded riparian habitat, but studies explicitly comparing restoration outcome...

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Main Authors: Elise S Gornish, Michael S Lennox, David Lewis, Kenneth W Tate, Randall D Jackson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5407843?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-5034c91d5cdd41c0a43f6812016777322020-11-25T01:20:09ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01124e017633810.1371/journal.pone.0176338Comparing herbaceous plant communities in active and passive riparian restoration.Elise S GornishMichael S LennoxDavid LewisKenneth W TateRandall D JacksonUnderstanding the efficacy of passive (reduction or cessation of environmental stress) and active (typically involving planting or seeding) restoration strategies is important for the design of successful revegetation of degraded riparian habitat, but studies explicitly comparing restoration outcomes are uncommon. We sampled the understory herbaceous plant community of 103 riparian sites varying in age since restoration (0 to 39 years) and revegetation technique (active, passive, or none) to compare the utility of different approaches on restoration success across sites. We found that landform type, percent shade, and summer flow helped explain differences in the understory functional community across all sites. In passively restored sites, grass and forb cover and richness were inversely related to site age, but in actively restored sites forb cover and richness were inversely related to site age. Native cover and richness were lower with passive restoration compared to active restoration. Invasive species cover and richness were not significantly different across sites. Although some of our results suggest that active restoration would best enhance native species in degraded riparian areas, this work also highlights some of the context-dependency that has been found to mediate restoration outcomes. For example, since the effects of passive restoration can be quite rapid, this approach might be more useful than active restoration in situations where rapid dominance of pioneer species is required to arrest major soil loss through erosion. As a result, we caution against labeling one restoration technique as better than another. Managers should identify ideal restoration outcomes in the context of historic and current site characteristics (as well as a range of acceptable alternative states) and choose restoration approaches that best facilitate the achievement of revegetation goals.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5407843?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elise S Gornish
Michael S Lennox
David Lewis
Kenneth W Tate
Randall D Jackson
spellingShingle Elise S Gornish
Michael S Lennox
David Lewis
Kenneth W Tate
Randall D Jackson
Comparing herbaceous plant communities in active and passive riparian restoration.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Elise S Gornish
Michael S Lennox
David Lewis
Kenneth W Tate
Randall D Jackson
author_sort Elise S Gornish
title Comparing herbaceous plant communities in active and passive riparian restoration.
title_short Comparing herbaceous plant communities in active and passive riparian restoration.
title_full Comparing herbaceous plant communities in active and passive riparian restoration.
title_fullStr Comparing herbaceous plant communities in active and passive riparian restoration.
title_full_unstemmed Comparing herbaceous plant communities in active and passive riparian restoration.
title_sort comparing herbaceous plant communities in active and passive riparian restoration.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Understanding the efficacy of passive (reduction or cessation of environmental stress) and active (typically involving planting or seeding) restoration strategies is important for the design of successful revegetation of degraded riparian habitat, but studies explicitly comparing restoration outcomes are uncommon. We sampled the understory herbaceous plant community of 103 riparian sites varying in age since restoration (0 to 39 years) and revegetation technique (active, passive, or none) to compare the utility of different approaches on restoration success across sites. We found that landform type, percent shade, and summer flow helped explain differences in the understory functional community across all sites. In passively restored sites, grass and forb cover and richness were inversely related to site age, but in actively restored sites forb cover and richness were inversely related to site age. Native cover and richness were lower with passive restoration compared to active restoration. Invasive species cover and richness were not significantly different across sites. Although some of our results suggest that active restoration would best enhance native species in degraded riparian areas, this work also highlights some of the context-dependency that has been found to mediate restoration outcomes. For example, since the effects of passive restoration can be quite rapid, this approach might be more useful than active restoration in situations where rapid dominance of pioneer species is required to arrest major soil loss through erosion. As a result, we caution against labeling one restoration technique as better than another. Managers should identify ideal restoration outcomes in the context of historic and current site characteristics (as well as a range of acceptable alternative states) and choose restoration approaches that best facilitate the achievement of revegetation goals.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5407843?pdf=render
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