Wetland Restoration in the New Millennium: Do Research Efforts Match Opportunities?
Article first published online: 29 AUG 2008
DOI: 10.1111/j.1526-100X.2008.00433.x
© 2008 Society for Ecological Restoration International
Additional Information
How to Cite
Wagner, K. I., Gallagher, S. K., Hayes, M., Lawrence, B. A. and Zedler, J. B. (2008), Wetland Restoration in the New Millennium: Do Research Efforts Match Opportunities?. Restoration Ecology, 16: 367–372. doi: 10.1111/j.1526-100X.2008.00433.x
Publication History
- Issue published online: 29 AUG 2008
- Article first published online: 29 AUG 2008
- Abstract
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Keywords:
- adaptive restoration;
- large experiment;
- literature survey
Abstract
Of 311 papers on wetland restoration, only 15 concerned large-scale experimentation in restoration sites. Most papers described what happened, reported on small field experiments, or discussed restoration targets. While these are important topics, our opinion is that we lose significant opportunities to learn how to recover populations, community structure, and ecosystem processes, and we limit our ability to document variability and whole-system responses, when we do not experiment at large scales. We suggest that, wherever possible, large projects facilitate field tests of alternative restoration approaches. Furthermore, we encourage researchers to take advantage of major restoration efforts by conducting large field experiments, assessing multiple responses, and offering restoration guidance in an adaptive framework.

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