Context matters when rewilding for climate change

IF 4.2 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION People and Nature Pub Date : 2024-02-15 DOI:10.1002/pan3.10609
Mary K. Burak, Kristy M. Ferraro, Kaggie Orrick, Nathalie R. Sommer, Diego Ellis‐Soto, Oswald J. Schmitz
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Abstract

There is a cross‐sectoral push among conservationists to simultaneously mitigate biodiversity loss and climate change, especially as the latter increasingly threatens the former. Growing evidence demonstrates that animals can have substantial impacts on carbon cycling. As such, there are increasing calls to use animal conservation and rewilding to dually overcome biodiversity loss and mitigate climate change. Specifically, trophic rewilding—which involves restoring intact animal communities, functional roles and trophic structure within food webs, and natural ecosystem processes—utilizes a rewilding framework to simultaneously support biodiversity conservation and carbon capture and storage. Trophic rewilding is a complex conservation approach to mitigating climate change, involving accurate estimations of baseline conditions and continuous monitoring of carbon cycling and species impacts within a system. It is also predicated on garnering social support for both the reintroduction and monitoring of a species, and obtaining the animals themselves. We are excited by the growing interest in this potential, but emphasize that a species' net impact on ecosystem carbon dynamics is context‐dependent. Caution is required whenever biodiversity conservation (including rewilding), climate change mitigation, and human welfare do not readily align. Hence—similar to other nature‐based solutions—these burgeoning efforts must avoid sweeping generalizations. To bolster successful trophic rewilding, we highlight a range of social and ecological context dependencies that can vary outcomes in a rewilded carbon cycle and provide ethical considerations for successful implementation. We conclude with an overview of the available technology to predict and monitor progress toward both biodiversity and climate mitigation goals. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.
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为应对气候变化而进行野化时,背景很重要
保护主义者正在跨部门地推动同时减缓生物多样性丧失和气候变化,特别是在后者日益威胁前者的情况下。越来越多的证据表明,动物可以对碳循环产生重大影响。具体而言,营养型野化涉及恢复完整的动物群落、食物网中的功能作用和营养结构以及自然生态系统过程,利用野化框架同时支持生物多样性保护和碳捕获与储存。营养型野化是减缓气候变化的一种复杂的保护方法,涉及对基线条件的准确估计以及对系统内碳循环和物种影响的持续监测。我们对这一潜力日益增长的兴趣感到兴奋,但同时强调,一个物种对生态系统碳动态的净影响取决于具体情况。当生物多样性保护(包括野化)、气候变化减缓和人类福利不一致时,就需要谨慎行事。因此,与其他基于自然的解决方案类似,这些新兴的努力必须避免一概而论。为了促进营养型野化的成功,我们强调了一系列社会和生态环境的依赖性,这些依赖性可能会改变野化碳循环的结果,并为成功实施提供了伦理方面的考虑。最后,我们概述了现有的技术,以预测和监测生物多样性和气候减缓目标的进展情况。
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来源期刊
People and Nature
People and Nature Multiple-
CiteScore
10.00
自引率
9.80%
发文量
103
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍:
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