Spanning the Science-Practice Divide: Why Restoration Scientists Need to be More Involved with Practiceстатья из журнала
Аннотация: estoration ecology is at a critical juncture. As environmental management policy increasingly embraces restoration, the field of restoration ecol-ogy must span the science-practice divide, or risk becom-ing obsolete. Parties on both sides of the divide agree that science needs to be incorporated into restoration practice and that current approaches are “simply not sufficient” (Hobbs 2007, Weiher 2007, Palmer 2009). There is a resounding call for reforms that better address current limitations facing ecological restoration and a higher pri-ority placed on the scientific understanding of ecosystem restoration. The “science-practice gap” is frequently cited as a major factor limiting both the science and practice of restoration, and there are few individuals or institutions working directly to change this dynamic (Giardina et al. 2007, Weiher 2007, Palmer 2009, Cabin et al. 2010). This gap persists despite agreement about the need for rigorous, publication-quality studies to identify relevant restoration methods (Giardina 2007).Restoration ecology has faced critiques from both sides of the science-practice divide. Science argues that restora-tion ecology is largely ad-hoc, site specific, and lacking a conceptual framework (Hobbs and Norton 1996, Allen et al. 1997). Practitioners question how much science is necessary for the successful practice of restoration and are frequently frustrated that research is not applied at appro-priate scales for practitioner application (Cabin 2007, Halle 2007). These critiques present very different perspectives of how restoration ecology should proceed: the former calling for broader across-site theory and research and the latter emphasizing site-specific practicality over scientific goals. Together, these perspectives have slowed the development of a third perspective: application of restoration ecology research to inform practice and the utility of practice to inform the science.It is at this science-practice boundary that research can best evaluate whether the science of restoration ecology effectively informs successful management efforts and determine how to increase the efficiency of information transfer. We begin with a broad overview of critiques from both sides of the science-practice debate. We then detail lessons we have learned from a project where we (as restoration scientists) worked alongside practitioners in an attempt to better inform restoration practice. We conclude with ways that a boundary-spanning approach might be most effective in addressing this divide.
Год издания: 2013
Авторы: S. J. M. Dickens, Katharine N. Suding
Издательство: University of Wisconsin Press
Источник: Ecological restoration, North America
Ключевые слова: Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies, Environmental Conservation and Management, Soil erosion and sediment transport
Открытый доступ: closed
Том: 31
Выпуск: 2
Страницы: 134–140