Animals in the Restoration Process: Progressing the Trends

A survey of fauna-focused papers in Restoration Ecology indicates that increased attention is being paid to this component of the biota. Although much of this work is for monitoring, a growing number of studies relate to the economic or ecological value of animals in restored land. There is still a...

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Main Author: Majer, Jonathan
Format: Journal Article
Published: Blackwell Science Inc. 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/48292
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author Majer, Jonathan
author_facet Majer, Jonathan
author_sort Majer, Jonathan
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description A survey of fauna-focused papers in Restoration Ecology indicates that increased attention is being paid to this component of the biota. Although much of this work is for monitoring, a growing number of studies relate to the economic or ecological value of animals in restored land. There is still a bias toward vertebrates over invertebrates, although the proportion of invertebrate-focused papers is steadily increasing. Analysis of these papers suggests that greater synergy would have been obtained if standardized protocols had been used and, in the case of invertebrates, studies would have been more informative if species-level identifications had been obtained. Partnerships with industry should allow long-term studies to be performed, which would provide more reliable information than that yielded from chronosequence-type investigations.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-482922019-05-17T01:57:56Z Animals in the Restoration Process: Progressing the Trends Majer, Jonathan A survey of fauna-focused papers in Restoration Ecology indicates that increased attention is being paid to this component of the biota. Although much of this work is for monitoring, a growing number of studies relate to the economic or ecological value of animals in restored land. There is still a bias toward vertebrates over invertebrates, although the proportion of invertebrate-focused papers is steadily increasing. Analysis of these papers suggests that greater synergy would have been obtained if standardized protocols had been used and, in the case of invertebrates, studies would have been more informative if species-level identifications had been obtained. Partnerships with industry should allow long-term studies to be performed, which would provide more reliable information than that yielded from chronosequence-type investigations. 2009 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/48292 10.1111/j.1526-100X.2009.00528.x Blackwell Science Inc. restricted
spellingShingle Majer, Jonathan
Animals in the Restoration Process: Progressing the Trends
title Animals in the Restoration Process: Progressing the Trends
title_full Animals in the Restoration Process: Progressing the Trends
title_fullStr Animals in the Restoration Process: Progressing the Trends
title_full_unstemmed Animals in the Restoration Process: Progressing the Trends
title_short Animals in the Restoration Process: Progressing the Trends
title_sort animals in the restoration process: progressing the trends
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/48292