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      Resilience and restoration of tropical and subtropical grasslands, savannas, and grassy woodlands : Tropical grassland resilience and restoration

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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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            Biodiversity and Resilience of Ecosystem Functions.

            Accelerating rates of environmental change and the continued loss of global biodiversity threaten functions and services delivered by ecosystems. Much ecosystem monitoring and management is focused on the provision of ecosystem functions and services under current environmental conditions, yet this could lead to inappropriate management guidance and undervaluation of the importance of biodiversity. The maintenance of ecosystem functions and services under substantial predicted future environmental change (i.e., their 'resilience') is crucial. Here we identify a range of mechanisms underpinning the resilience of ecosystem functions across three ecological scales. Although potentially less important in the short term, biodiversity, encompassing variation from within species to across landscapes, may be crucial for the longer-term resilience of ecosystem functions and the services that they underpin.
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              A Generalized Model of the Effects of Grazing by Large Herbivores on Grassland Community Structure

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Biological Reviews
                Biol Rev
                Wiley
                14647931
                April 2019
                April 2019
                September 24 2018
                : 94
                : 2
                : 590-609
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Institut Méditerranéen de Biodiversité et d'Ecologie marine et continentale (IMBE); Université d'Avignon et des Pays de Vaucluse, CNRS, IRD, Aix Marseille Université; Agroparc BP61207, Avignon 84911 cedex 9 France
                [2 ]Gembloux Agro-Bio Tech, Biodiversity and Landscape unit; University of Liege; Gembloux 5030 Belgium
                [3 ]Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP), Instituto de Biociências; Departamento de Botânica, Lab of Vegetation Ecology; Av. 24A, 1515, Rio Claro, SP 13506-900 Brazil
                [4 ]Departamento de Botânica; Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais; Belo Horizonte, MG 30161-901 Brazil
                [5 ]Laboratório de Ecologia e Hidrologia Florestal, Floresta Estadual de Assis; Instituto Florestal; PO box 104, Assis, SP 19802-970 Brazil
                [6 ]Departamento de Botânica; Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul; Porto Alegre, RS 91501-970 Brazil
                [7 ]Ecologia Evolutiva e Biodiversidade; Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais; Belo Horizonte, MG 30161-901 Brazil
                [8 ]Department of Biological Sciences; University of Cape Town and South African Environmental Observation Network, NRF; Rondebosch, 7701 South Africa
                [9 ]Restoration Ecology; Center of Life and Food Sciences Weihenstephan, Technische Universität München - TUM; Freising Germany
                [10 ]Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP), Instituto de Geociências e Ciências Exatas; Departamento de Geografia, Ecosystem Dynamics Observatory; Av. 24A, 1515, Rio Claro, SP 13506-900 Brazil
                [11 ]Department of Botany; University of Cape Town; P/Bag X3, Rondebosch, 7701, Cape Town South Africa
                [12 ]Department of Ecosystem Science and Management; Texas A&M University; College Station TX, 77843-2138 U.S.A.
                Article
                10.1111/brv.12470
                d54fb286-a5d7-45bb-abc3-5078d7724d17
                © 2018

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

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