Sustaining and enhancing altered ecosystems has become the new mantra for conservation and restoration managers as ecosystems continue to change in response to global warming and other environmental changes, says a new study led by the University of Colorado at Boulder. Professor Timothy Seastedt of CU-Boulder’s ecology and evolutionary biology department said atmospheric pollution, climate change, exotic species invasions, extinctions and land fragmentation have altered virtually every ecosystem on the planet. Managers and biologists should be nurturing so-called ‘novel ecosystems’ — thriving combinations of plants, animals and habitat that have never occurred together before — and developing new conservation strategies for them, he said. ‘The reality is that enormous environmental changes are happening very rapidly, and in many cases, there is very little we can do about them,’ said Seastedt. ‘We think the trick now is to accept, preserve and enhance these novel ecosystems and do what we can to shield them from further changes.’ A paper on the subject was published online Jan. 31 in Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, published by the Ecological Society of America. The paper was authored by Seastedt, Richard Hobbs of Murdoch University in Australia and Katharine N. Suding of […]
Sunday, February 3rd, 2008
Conservation Strategies Must Shift with Global Environmental Change, Says CU-Boulder Study
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Source: University of Colorado
Publication Date: 31-Jan-08
Link: Conservation Strategies Must Shift with Global Environmental Change, Says CU-Boulder Study
Source: University of Colorado
Publication Date: 31-Jan-08
Link: Conservation Strategies Must Shift with Global Environmental Change, Says CU-Boulder Study
Stephan: No click through on this report.