http://opa.yale.edu/news/article.aspx?id=6712
Published: May 27, 2009
A new meta-analysis finds that most ecosystems can recover from
environmental damage. But ecosystems take longer to recover from
human-induced destruction and depend on societies committed to their
cleanup and restoration.
New Haven, Conn. - Most polluted or damaged ecosystems
worldwide can recover within a lifetime if societies commit to their
cleanup or restoration, according to an analysis of 240 independent
studies by researchers at the
Yale School of Forestry &
Environmental Studies. Their findings appear today in the journal
PLoS ONE.
The researchers found that forest ecosystems recovered in 42 years on
average, while ocean bottoms recovered in less than 10 years. When
examined by disturbance type, ecosystems undergoing multiple,
interacting disturbances recovered in 56 years, and those affected by
either invasive species, mining, oil spills or trawling recovered in
as little as five years. Most ecosystems took longer to recover from
human-induced disturbances than from natural events, such as
hurricanes.
“The damages to these ecosystems are pretty serious,” said Oswald
Schmitz, an ecology professor at the Yale School of Forestry &
Environmental Studies and co-author of the meta-analysis along with
Yale graduate student Holly Jones.
“But the message is that if societies choose to become sustainable,
ecosystems will recover. It isn’t hopeless.” The analysis focuses
on seven ecosystem types and major anthropogenic disturbances, such as
agriculture, deforestation, invasive species, logging, mining, oil
spills, overfishing, power plants and trawling. Major natural
disturbances, including hurricanes and cyclones, are also accounted
for.
The researchers analyzed data derived from peer-reviewed studies
conducted over the past century that examined the recovery of large
ecosystems following a disturbance. The studies measured 94 variables
that were grouped into three categories: ecosystem function, animal
community and plant community.
The researchers quantified the recovery of each of the variables in
terms of the time it took for them to return to their pre-disturbance
state. The analysis found that 83 studies demonstrated recovery for
all variables; 90 reported a mixture of recovered and non-recovered
variables; and 67 reported no recovery for any variable. Schmitz said
15 percent of all the ecosystems in the analysis are beyond recovery.
Also, 54 percent of the studies that reported no recovery likely did
not run long enough to draw definitive conclusions.
In addition, the analysis suggests that an ecosystem’s recovery may
be independent of its degraded condition. Aquatic systems, the
researchers noted, may recover more quickly because species and
organisms that inhabit them turn over more rapidly than forests, for
example, whose habitats take longer to regenerate after logging or
clear-cutting.
The researchers point out that a potential “pitfall” of the
analysis is that the ecosystems may have already been in a disturbed
state when they were originally examined. Many ecosystems across the
globe that have experienced extinctions and other fundamental changes
as a result of human activities, combined with the ongoing effects of
climate change and pollution, are far removed from their historical,
natural pristine state. Thus ecologists measured recovery on the basis
of an ecosystem’s more recent condition. The Yale analysis points
out the need for the development of objective criteria to decide when
a system has fully recovered.
The researchers said the study rebuts speculation that it will take
centuries or millennia for degraded ecosystems to recover and
justifies an increased effort to restore degraded areas for the
benefit of future generations. “Restoration could become a more
important tool in the management portfolio of conservation
organizations that are entrusted to protect habitats on landscapes,”
Schmitz said.