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- <text id=91TT2310>
- <title>
- Oct. 14, 1991: Learning How to Revive Eden
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Oct. 14, 1991 Jodie Foster:A Director Is Born
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENVIRONMENT, Page 62
- Learning How To Revive the Wilds of Eden
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In the quest to mend shattered landscapes, ecologists discover
- that human hands can heal nature as well as destroy it
- </p>
- <p>By J. Madeleine Nash/Chicago--With reporting by Andrea
- Dorfman/Washington, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> Gone are the vast Highland forests of Scotland. Gone are
- the oceans of grass that graced the North American plains. Gone
- too are the lush Bahamian jungles that greeted Christopher
- Columbus and his sea-weary men. Today these lost landscapes,
- like vanished civilizations, exist only as mirages that dance
- in the mind's eye. And until recently, any notion that such
- priceless heirlooms might be reclaimed would have been dismissed
- as hopelessly quixotic.
- </p>
- <p> Now, however, some daring naturalists are starting to
- suggest that just as a smashed vase can be pieced back together
- and a war-torn cathedral reconstructed stone by stone, so too
- the battered remnants of natural masterpieces--bogs and fens,
- forests and prairies, deserts and coral reefs--may eventually
- be restored to some semblance of former glory. In at least a few
- spots around the globe, the dreamers say, humanity may be able
- to go back to Eden.
- </p>
- <p> Even as chain saws rip through the equatorial rain forests
- and overgrazing threatens to turn the African plains to dust,
- an unlikely coalition of university scientists and civil
- engineers, public officials and environmental activists has
- embarked on dozens, perhaps hundreds, of experimental projects
- aimed at repairing environmental damage. They call themselves
- restoration ecologists, and they are re-creating destroyed
- habitats from Britain to Costa Rica and from Israel to the
- American Midwest. With bulldozers and dredges, they are removing
- the dirt and garbage that have been dumped on wetlands. With
- hacksaws and herbicides, they are attacking exotic interlopers
- that have displaced native vegetation. With shovels and rakes,
- they are replanting original species of trees and grasses,
- returning to weed and water fragile seedlings a hectare at a
- time.
- </p>
- <p> Although few restoration projects are more than a decade
- old, many have already begun to generate encouraging results.
- In Costa Rica, University of Pennsylvania biologist Daniel
- Janzen is helping rebuild a nearly extinct tropical dry forest
- in the 110,000-hectare (272,000-acre) Guanacaste Conservation
- Area, which until five years ago had been overrun by cattle and
- torched annually by ranchers and hunters. In California, at the
- Nature Conservancy's Coachella Valley Preserve, a few dozen
- volunteers felled thousands of salt cedar trees that had sucked
- this small desert area nearly dry, clearing the way for the
- reappearance of palm trees, willows and migratory waterfowl. Off
- the coast of Scotland, Bernard Plante rose, a warden with the
- Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, and his wife Emma
- have planted 20,000 slender saplings--downy birch, rowan, oak
- and Scotch pine--to bring back the forest on tiny, windswept
- Isle Martin. And at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
- near Chicago, ground crews and volunteers have returned some 280
- hectares (700 acres) of former cornfields to a rustling expanse
- of big bluestem and Indian grass.
- </p>
- <p> Buoyed by such successes, government agencies and
- environmental groups have begun to launch restoration projects
- of unprecedented scale. The Countryside Commission for England
- and Wales has pledged to reforest 390 sq km (150 sq. mi.) of the
- industrialized Midlands with 30 million trees. The state of
- Maine has announced its intention to restore salmon and sturgeon
- to the Kennebec River by acquiring and breaching a 154-year-old
- dam. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has drawn up plans to
- regenerate wetlands killed off by flood-control projects. And
- in partnership with the Cook County Forest Preserve District,
- the Illinois Nature Conservancy has begun to resurrect thousands
- of hectares of prairie and woodlands. "We can be part of nature
- without wrecking it," asserts Steve Packard, the Illinois
- Conservancy's chief ecologist. "All we need is discipline,
- humility and knowledge."
- </p>
- <p> If restoration at times resembles gardening, it draws
- inspiration from a very different philosophy. Gardeners seek to
- improve on nature and tame its excesses. Restorationists,
- however, strive to return to the landscape the very things
- people find hostile, including fires, floods and all the noisome
- critters that help keep each ecosystem in healthy kilter. "The
- restorationist is a servant of nature, not of his or her
- personal whims or tastes," reflects William Jordan III, of the
- four-year-old Society for Ecological Restoration in Madison,
- Wis. "A prairie, for instance, is not altogether a pleasant
- place to be. Some people would not like the grasshoppers and
- mosquitoes and little burry things that stick to their clothes.
- Marshes? They make your feet wet, and there may be snakes."
- </p>
- <p> Restoring an ecosystem is somewhat like restoring a house
- or piece of antique furniture. "Before you begin," observes
- Holly Richter, a consultant with the Nature Conservancy in
- Boulder, "you need to know what the original looked like."
- Historical records can provide valuable insights. Passages from
- the Old Testament, for instance, have helped Israeli
- restorationists re-create biblical landscapes at Neot Kedumim,
- a 220-hectare (545-acre) nature reserve in the Judean hills. In
- similar fashion, the diaries of a 19th century doctor have
- provided Illinois ecologists with a list of plants that once
- flourished under the light shade of bur oak trees.
- </p>
- <p> Where no written records exist, restorationists turn to
- the geological record. Pollen preserved in layers of mud, for
- example, enabled a University of Arizona scientist to determine
- that a thousand years ago, the Nature Conservancy's Hassayampa
- River Preserve near Phoenix was covered by a marshy grassland
- unique to the Southwest. But the presence of corn pollen
- indicated that 500 years ago, Native Americans had farmed the
- site. "So do we restore this area to the way it was before the
- Native Americans disturbed it?" wonders the Nature Conservancy's
- Richter. "If it's not natural now, then when was it?"
- </p>
- <p> Even when restorationists have some notion of how to
- begin, they face a daunting enterprise. "You can destroy a
- prairie in two hours," observes Robert Betz, a Northeastern
- Illinois University biology professor. "But to rebuild it might
- take half a century or more." Essential to the task is
- identifying the dynamic process that shaped each ecosystem and,
- if need be, putting it back into play. Prairies and bur oak
- woodlands, for instance, were both created by fire. Without
- fire, their bright flowers and luxuriant grasses are shaded out
- by invading brush. Where in centuries past roving bands of
- Plains Indians set fire to the prairies to flush out game, today
- preserve managers and teams of volunteers set restored
- grasslands ablaze.
- </p>
- <p> Restorationists make use of the annual floods that
- stimulate the growth of riverine forests, flush out wetlands and
- rejuvenate them with fertile silt. Deprived of high-water
- surges, wetlands quickly die. In the 1960s, for example,
- flood-control canals transformed South Florida's wild Kissimmee
- River from a sinuous network of oxbows and tributaries into a
- stagnant ditch. The disastrous result: nearly 18,200 hectares
- (45,000 acres) of prime wetlands disappeared. Waterfowl and fish
- populations plummeted. Last year, in a startling about-face, the
- U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the South Florida Water
- Management District proposed to unleash the Kissimmee by filling
- in 47 km (29 miles) of canal and removing three flow-control
- systems. The projected cost: at least $422 million.
- </p>
- <p> Not only is wetland restoration expensive, but the
- vitality of restored wetlands also frequently proves
- disappointing. Initially, a new wetland created in south San
- Diego Bay seemed to do well--until it became infested with
- tiny plant-sucking insects. Then scientists learned, to their
- dismay, that grasses in the artificial marsh did not grow high
- enough to provide the beetle predators of these pests with
- waterproof living quarters. Today, five years after its
- construction, this underachieving wetland continues to struggle
- along. Its grasses are stunted, its food web impoverished.
- Biologist Joy Zedler, director of San Diego State University's
- Pacific Estuarine Research Laboratory, awards the restoration
- effort a barely passing grade. "I doubt we'll ever produce A+
- wetlands," she bleakly concludes.
- </p>
- <p> Increasingly, restorationists have begun their own version
- of battlefield triage, focusing efforts on natural areas that
- are sick but not yet mortally wounded. In New Zealand, for
- instance, they have deemed efforts to restore destroyed habitats
- on the main islands a lost cause. Instead they are concentrating
- on saving relatively pristine areas such as the Mercury
- Islands, one of the last strongholds of the rare milk-tree
- forest.
- </p>
- <p> If the quest at times seems impossibly romantic,
- restorationists display a refreshing pragmatism. Rather than
- demanding that all hydroelectric dams be dynamited, river
- restorationists insist that power generators install fish
- ladders and adjust water flows to help salmon and trout reach
- upstream spawning grounds. Al Steuter, manager of the Nature
- Conservancy's 20,800-hectare (51,400-acre) Niobrara Valley
- Preserve in Nebraska, hopes to demonstrate how ranchers can run
- cattle on restored prairies without destroying them. After all,
- he asks, "what's the point of restoration if we have to station
- guards to protect the landscape?"
- </p>
- <p> By embracing humans as an integral part of nature,
- restorationists are bringing a fresh perspective to the
- increasingly bitter contest between those who would exploit wild
- areas and those who would preserve them. Even more important,
- in their heroic, often desperate struggle to recover what has
- nearly been lost, they have grasped a truth many of us only
- dimly comprehend: if the fate of humans depends on nature, the
- fate of nature, irrevocably and irretrievably, rests in human
- hands.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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