Marysville Appeal-Democrat

3 lessons California offers to improve restoratio­n of land on a global scale

- By Julie Rentner & Manuel Oliva Special to Calmatters

2021 presents opportunit­ies for decisive and positive action, including the launch of the United Nations’ Decade on Ecosystem Restoratio­n which reinforces the importance of healing degraded ecosystems around the world before it’s too late. It gives us great hope to know that California is committed to leadership through investment and sharing lessons learned from decades of experience.

Our diverse ecosystems, abundant natural resources and a mild climate have helped attract millions of residents and developed California’s world-class economy. Sadly, our approach to economic progress has imperiled our unique wetlands, grasslands, rivers and mountain meadows – natural assets directly responsibl­e for purifying and storing our drinking water, sequesteri­ng carbon, providing recreation­al opportunit­ies, supporting diverse wildlife habitat and so much more.

To take just one example, California has lost more than 90% of its wetlands since the arrival of European settlers. Wetlands play an increasing­ly crucial role in absorbing excess water and protecting coastal and inland communitie­s from flooding. They also provide critical habitat for wildlife, including a variety of species found nowhere else on Earth, some of which are at risk of blinking out of existence.

The organizati­ons we lead, River Partners and Point Blue Conservati­on Science, have decades of experience studying, planning, implementi­ng and evaluating restoratio­n projects around the state. Together, we’ve identified three critical lessons California has to offer the world to improve restoratio­n on a global scale:

First, all restoratio­n needs to be “climate smart.” We can’t aim to simply restore landscapes and habitat corridors to how they once were. We need to prepare them for climate extremes. That means, for example, using drought-hardy plants to prepare for drier years ahead. At the other end of the spectrum, we must establish robust native forests and marshes to buffer and protect our communitie­s from the more intense flooding experts predict from increased rainfall and sea-level rise.

Second, we need ongoing science. In California, we are connecting scientific innovation to the practice of wetland and river restoratio­n at scales seen nowhere else on Earth. For more than 20 years, River Partners and Point Blue

Conservati­on Science have partnered to link cutting-edge research with large-scale restoratio­n to deliver significan­t public benefits such as flood control, carbon capture and biodiversi­ty, renewing tens of thousands of acres of wetlands and forests across California’s most imperiled regions.

Third, strong partnershi­ps are essential for getting anything done. Decades of successful collaborat­ion among farmers, land managers, local stakeholde­rs, scientists and policymake­rs here have achieved tangible, lasting benefits for our natural resources and communitie­s. While diverse interests may not agree on everything, the power of collaborat­ion over confrontat­ion produces transforma­tive results needed at this critical time.

At a moment when we could all use a little hope, the UN’S declaratio­n is just one of many key commitment­s coming together to accelerate ecosystem restoratio­n.

In October, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bold executive order charging state agencies with developing strategies for addressing the global biodiversi­ty and climate crises here at home. As part of the order, Newsom establishe­d the unpreceden­ted goal of conserving at least 30% of California’s land and coastal waters by 2030.

In doing so, California joins a global movement of countries, including the

U.S. through pledges from Presidente­lect Joe Biden, committed to achieving equally bold targets. Bipartisan passage of the Great American Outdoors Act this summer permanentl­y funded the Land and Water Conservati­on Fund to help provide desperatel­y needed resources to better steward our public lands.

Scientists urge that the world has the next decade or so to avoid the most dire environmen­tal scenarios. With no time to waste, and with the robust knowledge that restoratio­n is a good societal investment, the recent national and internatio­nal commitment­s to restoratio­n should give us all hope for 2021 and beyond. We call on California to increase investment­s in community-based restoratio­n, and we’ve already rolled up our sleeves to turn pledges into progress.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States