Restoration could become a more important tool in the management portfolio of conservation organizations that are entrusted to protect habitats on landscapes.
Restoration efforts can return polluted or degraded landscapes to previous states in less than a lifetime, according to study Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies. The study rebuts a common assumption that ecosystem recovery takea centuries, even millennia.
Yale researchers analyzed 240 independent studies that explored the recovery of degraded ecosystems due both to human-caused disturbances and natural disasters. In the meta-analysi,s published in PLoS ONE the researchers, found that on average forests recover in 42 years, while ocean bottoms recover in less than a decade. Ecosystems that suffered from a variety of disturbances took on average 56 years, while those recovering from mining, invasive species, oil spill, and trawling recovered on average in only 5 years.

Deforestation in Borneo. A new meta-analysis estimates that it takes on average 56 years for forests to recover. Photo by: Rhett A. Butler.
"The damages to these ecosystems are pretty serious," said Oswald Schmitz, co-author of the study. "But the message is that if societies choose to become sustainable, ecosystems will recover. It isn't hopeless."
The study found that ecosystems largely recovered quicker from natural disasters than from human ones. In addition, aquatic ecosystems recovered quicker than terrestrial ones.
Mongabay.com is an environmental science and conservation news website.

