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Ecological restoration of rich fens in Europe and North America: from trial and error to an evidence-based approach

Leon P. M. Lamers, Melanie A. Vile, Ab P. Grootjans, Mike C. Acreman, Rudy van Diggelen, Martin G. Evans, Curtis J. Richardson, Line Rochefort, Annemieke M. Kooijman, Jan G. M. Roelofs, Alfons J. P. Smolders

Biological Reviews. 2015;90:182-203.

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Abstract

Fens represent a large array of ecosystem services, including the highest biodiversity found among wetlands, hydrological services, water purification and carbon sequestration. Land-use change and drainage has severely damaged or annihilated these services in many parts of North America and Europe; restoration plans are urgently needed at the landscape level. We review the major constraints on the restoration of rich fens and fen water bodies in agricultural areas in Europe and disturbed landscapes in North America: (i) habitat quality problems: drought, eutrophication, acidification, and toxicity, and (ii) recolonization problems: species pools, ecosystem fragmentation and connectivity, genetic variability, and invasive species; and here provide possible solutions. We discuss both positive and negative consequences of restoration measures, and their causes. The restoration of wetland ecosystem functioning and services has, for a long time, been based on a trial-and-error approach. By presenting research and practice on the restoration of rich fen ecosystems within agricultural areas, we demonstrate the importance of biogeochemical and ecological knowledge at different spatial scales for the management and restoration of biodiversity, water quality, carbon sequestration and other ecosystem services, especially in a changing climate. We define target processes that enable scientists, nature managers, water managers and policy makers to choose between different measures and to predict restoration prospects for different types of deteriorated fens and their starting conditions.

Bibliographic metadata

Type of resource:
Content type:
Publication status:
Accepted
Publication type:
Publication form:
Published date:
Accepted date:
2014-02-28
Language:
eng
Journal title:
Abbreviated journal title:
ISSN:
Volume:
90
Start page:
182
End page:
203
Total:
21
Pagination:
182-203
Digital Object Identifier:
doi: 10.1111/brv.12102
Attached files Open Access licence:
Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives (CC BY-NC-ND)
Attached files embargo period:
Immediate release
Attached files release date:
7th December, 2015
Access state:
Active

Institutional metadata

University researcher(s):

Record metadata

Manchester eScholar ID:
uk-ac-man-scw:282417
Created by:
Evans, Martin
Created:
7th December, 2015, 16:40:56
Last modified by:
Evans, Martin
Last modified:
7th December, 2015, 16:40:56

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