Annapolis Valley Register

Beavers and oysters helping restore lost ecosystems

- DANIEL MERINO NEHAL EL-HADI

Ecosystem engineers are plants or animals that create, modify or maintain habitats.

Whether you are looking at tropical forests in Brazil, grasslands in California or coral reefs in Australia, it is hard to find places where humanity hasn’t left a mark. The scale of the alteration, invasion or destructio­n of natural ecosystems can be mindboggli­ngly huge.

Thankfully, researcher­s, government­s and everyday people around the world are putting more effort and money into conservati­on and restoratio­n every year. But the task is large. How do you plant a billion trees? How do you restore thousands of square miles of wetlands? How do you turn a barren ocean floor back into a thriving reef? In some cases, the answer lies with certain plants or animals – called ecosystem engineers – that can kickstart the healing.

In this episode of “The Conversati­on Weekly,” we talk to three experts about how ecosystem engineers can play a key role in restoring natural places and why the human and social sides of restoratio­n are just as important as the science.

Ecosystem engineers are plants or animals that create, modify or maintain habitats. As Joshua Larsen, an associate professor at the University of Birmingham, explains, beavers are a perfect example of an ecosystem engineer because of the dams and ponds they build.

“They create this pocket of still water, which allows aquatic vegetation to start to colonize that wouldn’t otherwise be there,” says Larsen. Once a beaver establishe­s a pond, the surroundin­g area begins to change from a creek or river into a wetland.

Larsen is part of an effort to reintroduc­e beavers into Britain, a place where they have been extinct for over 500 years and the landscape reflects that loss. There used to be hundreds of thousands of beavers – and hundreds of thousands of beaver ponds – all across Britain. Without beavers, it would be prohibitiv­ely difficult to restore wetlands at that scale. But, as Larsen explains, “Beavers are doing this engineerin­g of the landscape for free. And more importantl­y, they’re doing the maintenanc­e for free.”

This idea of using ecosystem engineers to do the labor-intensive work of restoratio­n for free is not limited to beavers. Dominic McAfee is a researcher at the University of Adelaide in Australia. He studies oysters and is leading a project to restore oyster reefs on the eastern and southern coasts of Australia.

“These reefs were the primary sort of marine habitat in coasts, coastal bays and estuaries over about 7,000 kilometers (4,350 miles) of Australian coastline,” says McAfee. But today, “They’re all gone. All those reefs were

scraped from the seafloor over the last 200 years.”

When you lose the oysters, you lose the entire reef ecosystem they support. So, a few years ago, McAfee and his colleagues decided to start bringing these reefs back. Oysters need a hard surface – like a rock, or historical­ly, other oysters – to grow on. But all those old oyster reefs are gone and only sand remains. “So the first step to restore oysters is to provide those hard foundation­s. We’ve been doing that in South Australia by deploying limestone boulders,” explains McAfee. After just a year, McAfee and his colleagues are starting to see results, with millions of oyster larva sticking to these boulders.

At this point, McAfee says that challenges are less about the science and more about getting community and political support. And that is where Andrew Kliskey comes in. Kliskey is a professor of community and landscape resilience at the University of Idaho in the U.S. He approaches restoratio­n and conservati­on projects by looking at what are called social-ecological systems. As Kliskey explains, “That means looking at environmen­tal issues not just from a single disciplina­ry point of view, but thinking that many things are often occurring in a town and in a community. Really, social-ecological systems means thinking about people and the landscape as being intertwine­d and how one interacts with the other.”

For scientists, this type of approach involves sociology, economics, indigenous knowledge and listening to communitie­s that they are working with. Kliskey explains that it’s not always easy: “Doing this sort transdisci­plinary work means being prepared to be uncomforta­ble. Maybe you’re trained as a hydrologis­t and you have to work with an economist. Or you work in a university and you want to work with people in a community with very real issues, that speak a different language and who have very different cultural norms. That can be uncomforta­ble.”

Having done this work for years, Kliskey has found that building trust is critical to any project and that the communitie­s have a lot to teach researcher­s. “If you’re a scientist, it doesn’t matter which community you work with, you have to be prepared to listen.”

 ?? FILE ?? Beaver ponds can create valuable wetland habitats that store water and support life.
FILE Beaver ponds can create valuable wetland habitats that store water and support life.

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