4.4 Article

Four reasons why functional traits are not being used in restoration practice

Journal

RESTORATION ECOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/rec.13788

Keywords

functional traits; interdisciplinary partnership; science-practice gap; trait-based restoration

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Restoration ecologists study the role of functional traits in community assembly and ecosystem functioning. However, practitioners often do not explicitly consider the use of traits in restoration. This article highlights four reasons preventing the use of traits in restoration and offers actions that can be taken to better incorporate functional traits in restoration practice.
Restoration ecologists devote considerable time and resources to understanding the role of functional traits in community assembly and ecosystem functioning. However, while functional traits show promise in supporting restoration practice in some circumstances, traits are not often explicitly considered by practitioners. Here we highlight four reasons that are preventing the use of traits in restoration, ranging from different restoration targets and frameworks to practical considerations around species selection, databases, plant stock availability, and measurement approaches. We provide actions that can be taken by researchers, practitioners, plant stock producers, and policy makers to better incorporate functional traits in restoration practice and show how traits can complement existing practices to achieve both traditional/taxonomic and functional restoration targets. We hope to guide critical partnerships, missing research, and immediate actions to leverage the value of traits at all stages in the restoration process.

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