Contents Notes |
Plant rarity and endangerment in North America / Larry E. Morse -- Reintroduction in a changing climate / Lynn S. Kutner and Larry E. Morse -- Spatial and biological scales in reintroduction / Peter S. White -- The regulatory and policy context / Charles B. McDonald -- Reintroducing endangered Hawaiian plants / Loyal A. Mehrhoff -- Defining and measuring success / Bruce M. Pavlik -- Selecting reintroduction sites / Peggy L. Fiedler and Richard D. Laven -- Designing populations : demographic, genetic, and horticultural dimensions / Edward O. Guerrant, Jr. -- Lessons from ecological theory : dispersal, establishment, and population structure / Richard B. Primack -- Monitoring / Robert D. Sutter -- Pinus torreyana at the Torrey Pines State Reserve, California / F. Thomas Ledig -- Rare plant mitigation : a policy perspective / Ken S. Berg -- Translocation as a mitigation strategy : lessons from California / Ann M. Howald -- Ecological function and sustainability in created wetlands / Joy B. Zedler -- Use of corporate lands / Brian J. Klatt and Ronald S. Niemann -- New directions for rare plant mitigation policy / Michael J. Bean -- Rare plant mitigation in Florida / George D. Gann and Noel L. Gerson -- Experimental reintroduction of Stephanomeria malheurensis / Edward O. Guerrant, Jr. -- Knowlton's cactus (Pediocactus knowltonii) reintroduction / Ann Cully -- Texas snowbells (Styrax texana) reintroduction / Charles B. McDonald -- Apalachicola Rosemary (Conradina glabra) reintroduction / Doria R. Gordon -- Pitcher's thistle (Cirsium pitcheri) reintroduction / Marlin Bowles and Jeanette McBride -- Southern Appalachian rare plant reintroduction on granite outcrops / Bart R. Johnson -- Small whorled pogonia (Isotria medeoloides) transplant project / William E. Brumback and Carol W. Fyler. The reintroduction of rare and endangered species to their natural habitat is one of emerging tools of ecosystem management. Yet despite hundreds of ongoing projects, the biological underpinnings of such activity are poorly understood, and important questions remain. Restoring Diversity provides biological, policy, and regulatory foundations for successful restoration of rare plants. Topics considered include the strategic and legal context for rare plant restoration, the biology of restoration, use (and misuse) of mitigation in rare plant conservation, and case studies from across the United States. Restoring Diversity presents model guidelines for the reintroduction of endangered plants - guidelines that incorporate ideas contained in the book's chapters with the wide-ranging experience of experts in the field. It is a pathbreaking work that not only unifies concepts in the field of restoration, but also fills significant technical and policy gaps and provides operational tools for successful restorations. |