RT Book,_Whole T1 Best practices in evaluation and restoration of degraded mediterranean environments A1 Merino García, Agustín A1 Doni, Serena A1 Evelpidou, Niki A1 Ferreira, Teresa A1 García Arias, Ana Isabel A1 Masciandaro, Grazia A1 Rodríguez González, Patricia M. A2 Merino García, Agustín A2 Doni, Serena A2 Evelpidou, Niki A2 García Arias, Ana Isabel A2 Masciandaro, Grazia A2 Rodríguez González, Patricia M. K1 Wetlands K1 Sustainable management K1 Erosion K1 Land rehabilitation K1 Ecosystem services K1 Ecosystem services AB Let’s face it. There is no way to restore an ecosystem, not to mention an entire landscape. The amazing diversity of organisms contained in an ecosystem, even the tiniest one, and the variety of the interactions needed to generate so many functions should be regarded as a unique wonder. As ecological restoration progresses, we are increasingly convinced that it can never substitute protection and conservation.Ecosystem’s complexity is so overwhelming, that we need to cut them into pieces before we can try to understand it. Not surprisingly, when it is time for rebuilding, we focus on dominant, key, charismatic species, hoping that the many bolts and nuts that are left aside will spontaneously join a machine that will run finely.Furthermore, we want the ecosystem recovered in a legislative period or a few decades, disregarding the increasing amount of evidence showing that the effects of natural and anthropogenic disturbances can be detected after millennia of secondary succession.Ecological restoration is about speed and acceleration, thus assuming that tempo is not an integral part of ecological processes. We use large amounts of exogenous energy in the form of fertilizers, organic amendments, physical structures, geomorphic profiling, seed banks, machinery, nurseries and labor to summarize a process that may last for centuries into a few years or decades. While doing this, we forget that biodiversity is inversely related toenergy flow (d2B/dt2 = –dD/dt, where B is biomass, D is diversity and t is time, as Margalef (1968) suggested). Clearly, more studies are needed to understand the relationship between energy inputs, community assemblage and ecosystem function, that is, between resources committed and restoration success. PB IBADER (Universidade de Santiago de Compostela-Lugo) YR 2019 FD 2019 LK https://hdl.handle.net/10347/42217 UL https://hdl.handle.net/10347/42217 LA eng NO Merino, A., Doni, S., Evelpidou, N., Ferreira, T., García Arias, A. I., Masciandaro, G. & Rodríguez-González, P. M. (2019). Best practices in evaluation and restoration of degraded mediterranean environments. IBADER. https://www.ibader.gal/download.php?f=2020_MonogIBADER_BestPrc-1352.pdf NO This handbook has been carried out in the framework of the project LAND DEGRADATION AND REHABILITATION IN MEDITERRANEAN ENVIRONMENTS (LANDCARE), which belongs to the ERASMUS+ program (KEY ACTION 2 - STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIP (KA203). October 2015-September 2018. DS Minerva RD 24 abr 2026