A recruitment niche framework for improving seed-based restoration

Published Article

Colorado

Publication date: July 12, 2023

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This study introduces a recruitment niche framework to strengthen seed‑based restoration by quantifying species’ recruitment strategies, improving forward‑looking seed mix design, predicting natural recovery from seed banks, and guiding precision seeding technologies. It offers a unified ecological foundation for more resilient restoration outcomes.

Subject Tags

  • Nature-based solutions
  • Habitat restoration

Abstract

As larger tracts of land experience degradation, seed-based restoration (SBR) will be a primary tool to reestablish vegetation and ecosystem function. SBR has advanced in terms of technical and technological approaches, yet plant recruitment remains a major barrier in some systems, notably drylands. There is an unmet opportunity to test science-based approaches to seed mix design and application, based not only on diversity or local provenance, but on the unique recruitment strategies of species. We lay out a framework that uses a quantitative representation of species' recruitment niches to match them to targeted goals (e.g. drought or invasion resistance) and methods (e.g. precision tools and technologies) in SBR. We first describe how to quantify the recruitment niche with seed and seedling traits tied to observed recruitment responses to environmental factors. We then show how a quantified recruitment niche framework can serve as the foundation to address three major restoration challenges: (1) designing forward-looking seed mixes that increase resilience to future climate and disturbance, (2) accounting for natural recovery in SBR planning, and (3) applying precision seeding practices to maximize restoration success. Finally, we demonstrate these ideas with existing data and discuss key challenges to adoption in SBR practice. While the ideas in this framework are based in ecological theory, they will require substantial testing and refinement by scientists engaged in SBR efforts. If this framework is integrated into research agendas, we believe it has the potential to unify and advance diverse elements of seed-based restoration ecology and improve restoration outcomes.

Citations

Larson, J. E., Agneray, A. C., Boyd, C. S., Bradford, J. B., Kildisheva, O. A., Suding, K. N., & Copeland, S. M. (2023). A recruitment niche framework for improving seed‐based restoration. Restoration Ecology31(7), e13959.

https://doi.org/10.1111/rec.13959

TNC Authors

  • Olga Kildisheva
    The Nature Conservancy