4.3 Article

Historicity and ecological restoration

Journal

BIOLOGY & PHILOSOPHY
Volume 30, Issue 1, Pages 77-98

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10539-014-9467-6

Keywords

Historicity; Path dependence; Historical fidelity; Restoration; Ecology; Adaptive management

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This paper analyzes the relevance and interconnection of two forms of historicity in ecological restoration, namely historical fidelity and path dependence. Historical fidelity is the practice of attempting to restore an ecological system to some sort of idealized past condition. Path dependence occurs when a system can evolve in alternative local equilibria, and that the order and timing of the events that follow from the initial state influence which equilibrium is reached. Using theoretical examples and case studies, the following analysis shows that path dependence can seriously impinge the feasibility of historical fidelity, thus reinforcing the idea that restoration ecology needs to move away from a rigid reliance on historical fidelity and is sometimes justified to endorse an interventionist agenda. Yet, contra recent criticisms, I argue that ecological restoration, directed by prudential and evidence-based reasoning, should maintain historical fidelity as one of its guiding objectives.

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