Wild by Design: The Rise of Ecological Restorationis a 2022 book by Laura J. Martin, Associate Professor of Environmental Studies atWilliams College.[1][2]The book explains howecological restorationbecame a global pursuit.[3]Martin defines restoration as "an attempt to co-design nature with non-human collaborators."[4]Wild by Design calls for the unification of ecological restoration and social justice.[5]

Wild by Design: The Rise of Ecological Restoration
AuthorLaura J. Martin
LanguageEnglish
SubjectEcological restoration;Biodiversity
GenreEnvironmental history;History of biology
Published2022
PublisherHarvard University Press
Media typePrint
Pages336
ISBN9780674979420

Content

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Wild by Design begins with the founding of theAmerican Bison Societyin 1905 and ends with efforts to useassisted migrationandassisted evolutionto save species fromclimate change.[6]During this period restoration transformed “from a diffuse, uncoordinated practice into a scientific discipline and an international and increasingly privatized undertaking."[7]

The restoration movement began in the early 1900s when conservationists dissatisfied with gun and hunting restrictions argued that bison could be bred and then released onto designated reservations. Showing that the firstbisonreservations in the United States were established on Indian reservations, Martin argues these restoration efforts focused on benefits for white settlers while disregarding Native American sovereignty.[8]

The 1930s were a key time for restoration efforts. Asecologybecame a professional science, ecologists began to frame nature reservations asscientific controlsites for their studies. Pursuing scientific investigation, restorationists sought to protect ecosystems like grasslands that had previously attracted little attention.[6]At the same time, women botanists and landscape architects like Eloise Butler,Edith Roberts,andElsa Rehmanndeveloped the science of native plant propagation. Influenced by their work,Aldo Leopoldand otherEcological Society of Americamembers began to manage animals by manipulating plant species rather than eliminating predators or artificially feeding species.

TheAtomic Ageled ecologists to shift from restoring individual species to ecosystem restoration.[9]Ecologists traced fallout from nuclear weapons as it moved through organisms and ecosystems.[10]During the 1960s, theU.S. Atomic Energy Commissionfunded simulations ofWorld War III,in which ecologists intentionally destroyed ecosystems to study how biodiversity recovered.E. O. Wilson,for instance, poisoned entire islands off the Florida coast to study their restoration.[6]Through these experiments, ecologists developed the narrative that nature could be irreversibly damaged. Thediversity-stability hypothesisemerged from these experiments, along with the idea that certain species are more resilient to environmental disturbance than others.

Part III of Wild by Design analyses the impact of post-1970s environmental laws on restoration efforts and why the goal of returning ecosystems to precolonial conditions emerged.[11]For decades, the U.S.Fish and Wildlife Servicehad killed native predators, but with theEndangered Species Act of 1973in place, the FWS began captive breeding programs for endangered wildlife, including predators. Meanwhile, land trusts likeThe Nature Conservancyfound it increasingly difficult to secure federal permission to work with endangered and threatened species and they shifted to killing non-native species.[6]Invasive speciesmanagement became a widespread practice amongland trusts,and the number of land trusts skyrocketed in the 1980s. Land managers "naturalized the precolonial baseline, obfuscating their role in designing native nature."[12]The internationalSociety for Ecological Restorationwas founded by land trust managers in 1988.

In the 1990s restoration was corporatized and consolidated. Martin argues that wetland restoration practices under theClean Water Actcreated the precedent for internationalcarbon offsetting.[13]The Walt Disney Company, The Nature Conservancy, the Florida Department of Environmental Regulation, and others brokered theDisney Wilderness Preserveas the world's first largeoff-site mitigationproject. Noting that offsetting projects are often based in the Global South, while those purchasing offsetting “credits” are in the Global North, Martin denounces carbon colonialism as an example of how restoration can create unequal distributions of power and resources.[14]

Reception

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Professor Peter Brewitt praised the book as timely, engaging and entertaining, as well as for being the first to adequately tell the "century-spanning story of ecological restoration." He predicts it will be a foundational work for those researching restoration history and politics. Yet Brewitt also suggests Martin's treatment doesn't always do full justice to the wide scope of her subject, and in particular that the book fails to clarify how representative the cases it features are.[10]Writer Celeste Pepitone-Nahas suggested the book's historical sweep alone makes it a major achievement, though said she would have preferred more coverage on the efforts of Indigenous activists.[14]Author Julie Dunlap praised the book as incisive and for transiting Martin's "erudite perspective", but regretted the relative lack of coverage on efforts to protect nature fromglobal warming.[15]

Awards

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Wild by Designwon the 2023 John Brinckerhoff Jackson Book Prize from the Foundation for Landscape Studies.[16]It was a finalist for the George Perkins Marsh Prize from theAmerican Society for Environmental History[17]and the 2023Project SyndicateSustainability Book Award.[18]

See also

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History of biology
Conservation in the United States
Restoration ecology
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Rewilding

References

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  1. ^Martin, Laura J. (2022-05-17).Wild by Design: The Rise of Ecological Restoration.Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.ISBN978-0-674-97942-0.
  2. ^"Laura J. Martin".Center for Environmental Studies.Retrieved2023-11-26.
  3. ^Dupre, John (2022-11-13)."Managing Nature: On Recent Books About Conservation and Genetic Modification".Los Angeles Review of Books.Retrieved2023-11-26.
  4. ^Martin, Laura J. (2022).Wild by Design: The Rise of Ecological Restoration.Harvard University Press. p. 5.ISBN9780674979420.
  5. ^Elias, Naomi (2022-07-04)."The Tricky Politics of Ecological Restoration".ISSN0027-8378.Retrieved2023-11-26.
  6. ^abcdHennessy, Elizabeth (2023-10-01)."Wild by Design: The Rise of Ecological Restoration".Environmental History.28(4): 798–800.doi:10.1086/726413.ISSN1084-5453.S2CID264906796.
  7. ^Higgs, Eric S. (2023)."Wild by Design: The Rise of Ecological Restoration. LauraMartin (2022) Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, U.S.A., 336 pages, $39.95 (hardcover), ISBN 9780674979420 (hardback)".Restoration Ecology.31(4).Bibcode:2023ResEc..3113921H.doi:10.1111/rec.13921.ISSN1061-2971.S2CID258497604.
  8. ^Martin, Laura J. (2022).Wild by Design: The Rise of Ecological Restoration.Harvard University Press. pp. 79–81.ISBN9780674979420.
  9. ^Nijhuis, Michelle."Refill the Swamp! | Michelle Nijhuis".ISSN0028-7504.Retrieved2023-11-26.
  10. ^abBrewitt, Peter Kimball (2022)."Wild by Design: The Rise of Ecological Restoration by Laura J. Martin (review)".Ecological Restoration.40(4): 277–278.doi:10.3368/er.40.4.277.ISSN1543-4079.S2CID254686703.
  11. ^Ponsford, Matthew (2023)."What" rewilding "means—and what's missing from this new movement".MIT Technology Review.Retrieved2023-11-26.
  12. ^Martin, Laura J. (2022).Wild by Design: The Rise of Ecological Restoration.Harvard University Press. p. 172.ISBN9780674979420.
  13. ^"Stine on Martin, 'Wild by Design: The Rise of Ecological Restoration' | H-Net".networks.h-net.org.Retrieved2023-12-01.
  14. ^abPepitone-Nahas, Celeste (2022-06-03)."Restoring the Future: Review of Wild by Design by Laura J. Martin".Ancillary Review of Books.Retrieved2023-11-27.
  15. ^Julie Dunlap."Book Review: Wild by Design: The Rise of Ecological Restoration".Washington Independent Review of Books.Retrieved2023-12-02.
  16. ^"JB 2021-Present Winners".University of Virginia School of Architecture.2022-11-09.Retrieved2023-11-26.
  17. ^"American Society for Environmental History - Past Recipients".aseh.org.Retrieved2023-11-26.
  18. ^"Sustainability Book Award 2023".Project Syndicate.Retrieved2023-11-26.