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      An interdisciplinary framework for evaluating 19th century landscape paintings for ecological research

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          Abstract

          As we contemplate the future of forest landscapes under changing climate conditions and land‐use demands, there is increasing value in studying historic forest conditions and how these landscapes have changed following past disturbances. Historic landscape paintings are a potential source of data on preindustrial forests with highly detailed, full‐color depictions of overstory and understory environments. They display key details about forest community composition, microhabitat features, and structural complexity from a time well before the advent of color photography. Despite these paintings' potential, their scientific applications have been impeded by questions of validity. How truly accurate are the images portrayed in these paintings? How much of an image is an artist's manipulation of a scene to best illustrate an allegory or romanticized view of nature? Following an established assessment model from historical ecology for evaluating resource validity, we demonstrate how scholarship on art history can be integrated with ecological understanding of forest landscapes to follow this model and address these questions of image veracity in 19th century American art. Further, to illustrate the potential use of these historic images in ecological studies, we present in a case study assessing microhabitat features of 10 different paintings. While this paper explores 19th century landscape art broadly, we focus our art historical review in particular on Asher Durand, a prolific and influential artist associated with the so‐called “Hudson River School” in the mid‐1800s. Durand left clear records about his perspectives on accurately depicting nature, and from a review of images and writings of Durand, we find support for the potential use of many of his paintings and sketches in historic forest ecology research. However, we also identify important caveats regarding potential ecological interpretations from these images. More broadly, because 19th century landscape paintings are not always directly transcriptive, and because regional art cultures differed in the 1800s, we cannot within this paper speak about landscape image veracity across all 19th century landscape art. However, in following established methods in historical ecology and integrating tools from art history research, we show that one can identify accurate historic landscape paintings for application in scientific studies.

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          APPLIED HISTORICAL ECOLOGY: USING THE PAST TO MANAGE FOR THE FUTURE

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            Ecological restoration in the light of ecological history.

            Ecological history plays many roles in ecological restoration, most notably as a tool to identify and characterize appropriate targets for restoration efforts. However, ecological history also reveals deep human imprints on many ecological systems and indicates that secular climate change has kept many targets moving at centennial to millennial time scales. Past and ongoing environmental changes ensure that many historical restoration targets will be unsustainable in the coming decades. Ecological restoration efforts should aim to conserve and restore historical ecosystems where viable, while simultaneously preparing to design or steer emerging novel ecosystems to ensure maintenance of ecological goods and services.
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              Land-Use History as Long-Term Broad-Scale Disturbance: Regional Forest Dynamics in Central New England

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
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                Journal
                Ecosphere
                Ecosphere
                Wiley
                2150-8925
                2150-8925
                September 2023
                September 08 2023
                September 2023
                : 14
                : 9
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Department of Forest Ecosystems and Society Oregon State University Corvallis Oregon USA
                [2 ] Patricia Valian Reser Center for the Creative Arts Oregon State University Corvallis Oregon USA
                [3 ] Forest Health Protection, State and Private Forestry USDA Forest Service Durham New Hampshire USA
                [4 ] Rubenstein School of Environment and Natural Resources University of Vermont Burlington Vermont USA
                [5 ] Department of Forest Engineering, Resources, and Management Oregon State University Corvallis Oregon USA
                [6 ] Smithsonian American Art Museum Washington DC USA
                Article
                10.1002/ecs2.4649
                81a9d17e-df83-4cf7-bb9c-3d6208eb8944
                © 2023

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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