A life-of-mine approach to fauna monitoring is critical for recovering functional ecosystems to restored landscapes

Mineral extraction activities are intensely disruptive to ecosystems and their associated fauna. Few countries globally have comprehensive legislation surrounding mine site restoration, but within Australia, restoration of discontinued mine sites is a legislative requirement. However, substantial am...

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Main Authors: Cross, Sophie, Bradley, Holly, Tudor, Emily, Craig, M.D., Tomlinson, Sean, Bamford, M.J., Bateman, Bill, Cross, Adam
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2021
Online Access:http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/IC150100041
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/87428
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author Cross, Sophie
Bradley, Holly
Tudor, Emily
Craig, M.D.
Tomlinson, Sean
Bamford, M.J.
Bateman, Bill
Cross, Adam
author_facet Cross, Sophie
Bradley, Holly
Tudor, Emily
Craig, M.D.
Tomlinson, Sean
Bamford, M.J.
Bateman, Bill
Cross, Adam
author_sort Cross, Sophie
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Mineral extraction activities are intensely disruptive to ecosystems and their associated fauna. Few countries globally have comprehensive legislation surrounding mine site restoration, but within Australia, restoration of discontinued mine sites is a legislative requirement. However, substantial ambiguity regarding the optimal techniques for restoring biodiverse and functional fauna assemblages remains, and monitoring activities typically focus on vegetation communities despite functioning ecosystems being reliant on key trophic interactions involving fauna. When fauna are considered, monitoring efforts typically yield baseline surveys of species richness and the presence or absence of conservation-significant taxa. Even where complete ecosystem recovery is not the goal of post-mining ecological recovery, we argue that there is a critical need for a life-of-mine approach to fauna monitoring underpinned by greater dialog between researchers, environmental regulators, and the mining industry. Environmental Impact Assessments should include requirements for the consideration of all potential impacts of mining on the structure, behavior, and ecological roles of fauna communities, restoration practices must facilitate the return of functional, resilient, and biodiverse fauna communities to restored post-mining landscapes, and the scope of monitoring practices should be broadened to a holistic examination of fauna communities. Recognizing, quantifying, and monitoring the impacts of mining activities and subsequent rehabilitation or restoration on fauna is vital to understanding how anthropogenic disturbances affect natural ecosystems, and in assisting in the successful recovery of ecosystem functionality to areas that have been damaged, degraded, or destroyed.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-874282022-02-08T05:50:45Z A life-of-mine approach to fauna monitoring is critical for recovering functional ecosystems to restored landscapes Cross, Sophie Bradley, Holly Tudor, Emily Craig, M.D. Tomlinson, Sean Bamford, M.J. Bateman, Bill Cross, Adam Mineral extraction activities are intensely disruptive to ecosystems and their associated fauna. Few countries globally have comprehensive legislation surrounding mine site restoration, but within Australia, restoration of discontinued mine sites is a legislative requirement. However, substantial ambiguity regarding the optimal techniques for restoring biodiverse and functional fauna assemblages remains, and monitoring activities typically focus on vegetation communities despite functioning ecosystems being reliant on key trophic interactions involving fauna. When fauna are considered, monitoring efforts typically yield baseline surveys of species richness and the presence or absence of conservation-significant taxa. Even where complete ecosystem recovery is not the goal of post-mining ecological recovery, we argue that there is a critical need for a life-of-mine approach to fauna monitoring underpinned by greater dialog between researchers, environmental regulators, and the mining industry. Environmental Impact Assessments should include requirements for the consideration of all potential impacts of mining on the structure, behavior, and ecological roles of fauna communities, restoration practices must facilitate the return of functional, resilient, and biodiverse fauna communities to restored post-mining landscapes, and the scope of monitoring practices should be broadened to a holistic examination of fauna communities. Recognizing, quantifying, and monitoring the impacts of mining activities and subsequent rehabilitation or restoration on fauna is vital to understanding how anthropogenic disturbances affect natural ecosystems, and in assisting in the successful recovery of ecosystem functionality to areas that have been damaged, degraded, or destroyed. 2021 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/87428 10.1111/rec.13540 http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/IC150100041 restricted
spellingShingle Cross, Sophie
Bradley, Holly
Tudor, Emily
Craig, M.D.
Tomlinson, Sean
Bamford, M.J.
Bateman, Bill
Cross, Adam
A life-of-mine approach to fauna monitoring is critical for recovering functional ecosystems to restored landscapes
title A life-of-mine approach to fauna monitoring is critical for recovering functional ecosystems to restored landscapes
title_full A life-of-mine approach to fauna monitoring is critical for recovering functional ecosystems to restored landscapes
title_fullStr A life-of-mine approach to fauna monitoring is critical for recovering functional ecosystems to restored landscapes
title_full_unstemmed A life-of-mine approach to fauna monitoring is critical for recovering functional ecosystems to restored landscapes
title_short A life-of-mine approach to fauna monitoring is critical for recovering functional ecosystems to restored landscapes
title_sort life-of-mine approach to fauna monitoring is critical for recovering functional ecosystems to restored landscapes
url http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/IC150100041
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/87428