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      Restoring assemblages of salt marsh halophytes in the presence of a rapidly colonizing dominant species

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      Wetlands
      Society of Wetland Scientists

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          Diversity and productivity in a long-term grassland experiment.

          Plant diversity and niche complementarity had progressively stronger effects on ecosystem functioning during a 7-year experiment, with 16-species plots attaining 2.7 times greater biomass than monocultures. Diversity effects were neither transients nor explained solely by a few productive or unviable species. Rather, many higher-diversity plots outperformed the best monoculture. These results help resolve debate over biodiversity and ecosystem functioning, show effects at higher than expected diversity levels, and demonstrate, for these ecosystems, that even the best-chosen monocultures cannot achieve greater productivity or carbon stores than higher-diversity sites.
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            Biodiversity and stability in grasslands

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              Alternative states and positive feedbacks in restoration ecology.

              There is increasing interest in developing better predictive tools and a broader conceptual framework to guide the restoration of degraded land. Traditionally, restoration efforts have focused on re-establishing historical disturbance regimes or abiotic conditions, relying on successional processes to guide the recovery of biotic communities. However, strong feedbacks between biotic factors and the physical environment can alter the efficacy of these successional-based management efforts. Recent experimental work indicates that some degraded systems are resilient to traditional restoration efforts owing to constraints such as changes in landscape connectivity and organization, loss of native species pools, shifts in species dominance, trophic interactions and/or invasion by exotics, and concomitant effects on biogeochemical processes. Models of alternative ecosystem states that incorporate system thresholds and feedbacks are now being applied to the dynamics of recovery in degraded systems and are suggesting ways in which restoration can identify, prioritize and address these constraints.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Wetlands
                Wetlands
                Society of Wetland Scientists
                0277-5212
                1943-6246
                September 2006
                September 2006
                : 26
                : 3
                : 667-676
                Article
                10.1672/0277-5212(2006)26[667:RAOSMH]2.0.CO;2
                0c430e68-2a02-4f98-ada8-cda30c434417
                © 2006
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