The global scale and rapidity of environmental change is challenging ecologists to reimagine their theoretical principles and management practices. Increasingly, historical ecological conditions are inadequate targets for restoration ecology, geographically circumscribed nature reserves are incapable of protecting all biodiversity, and the precautionary principle applied to management interventions no longer ensures avoidance of ecological harm. In addition, human responses to global environmental changes, such as migration, building of protective infrastructures, and land use change, are having their own negative environmental impacts. We use examples from wildlands, urban, and degraded environments, as well as marine and freshwater ecosys...
Since its emergence in the past decades, restoration ecology has demonstrated an astounding growth a...
The capacity of ecosystems to deliver essential services to society is already under stress. The add...
We examine issues to consider when reframing conservation science and practice in the context of glo...
The global scale and rapidity of environmental change is challenging ecologists to reimagine their t...
This chapter takes the emerging concept of ‘renewal ecology’ as a lens through which to analyse whet...
Social scientists are aware that ‘nature’ itself has to be understood in its ‘social quality’. Howev...
Rapid biodiversity change that is already occurring across the globe is accelerating, with major and...
Abstract Conservation targets that reference historical expectations, such as maintaining specified ...
The Anthropocene proposal suggested that the Earth may have entered a new geological epoch, in which...
Ecology is the study of the interaction between organisms and their environment. To fulfill the food...
Evolution has molded the past and paves the future of biodiversity. As anthropogenic damage to the E...
Biodiversity is essential to human well-being, but people have been reducing biodiversity throughout...
The extent of human-induced change and damage to Earth's ecosystems renders ecosystem repair an esse...
Ecological recovery has never been more important yet incongruously remains alow priority in environ...
Humans are now recognized as the main drivers of environmental change, leaving the future of our pla...
Since its emergence in the past decades, restoration ecology has demonstrated an astounding growth a...
The capacity of ecosystems to deliver essential services to society is already under stress. The add...
We examine issues to consider when reframing conservation science and practice in the context of glo...
The global scale and rapidity of environmental change is challenging ecologists to reimagine their t...
This chapter takes the emerging concept of ‘renewal ecology’ as a lens through which to analyse whet...
Social scientists are aware that ‘nature’ itself has to be understood in its ‘social quality’. Howev...
Rapid biodiversity change that is already occurring across the globe is accelerating, with major and...
Abstract Conservation targets that reference historical expectations, such as maintaining specified ...
The Anthropocene proposal suggested that the Earth may have entered a new geological epoch, in which...
Ecology is the study of the interaction between organisms and their environment. To fulfill the food...
Evolution has molded the past and paves the future of biodiversity. As anthropogenic damage to the E...
Biodiversity is essential to human well-being, but people have been reducing biodiversity throughout...
The extent of human-induced change and damage to Earth's ecosystems renders ecosystem repair an esse...
Ecological recovery has never been more important yet incongruously remains alow priority in environ...
Humans are now recognized as the main drivers of environmental change, leaving the future of our pla...
Since its emergence in the past decades, restoration ecology has demonstrated an astounding growth a...
The capacity of ecosystems to deliver essential services to society is already under stress. The add...
We examine issues to consider when reframing conservation science and practice in the context of glo...