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Restoration for Resilience: The Role of Plant–Microbial Interactions and Seed Provenance in Ecological Restoration

Formally Refereed

Abstract

With global efforts to restore grassland ecosystems, researchers and land management practitioners are working to reconstruct habitat that will persist and withstand stresses associated with climate change. Part of these efforts involve movement of plant material potentially adapted to future climate conditions from native habitat or seed production locations to a new restoration site. Restoration practice often follows this plant-centered, topdown approach. However, we suggest that restoration of belowground interactions, namely between plants and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi or rhizobia, is important for restoring resilient grasslands. In this synthesis we highlight these interactions and offer insight into how their restoration might be included in current grassland restoration practice. Ultimately, restoration of belowground interactions may contribute to grassland habitat that can withstand and respond to future climate uncertainties.

Keywords

prairie restoration, seed sourcing, species interactions, resilience

Citation

Larson, Jennifer L.; Venette, Robert C.; Larson, Diane L. 2022. Restoration for Resilience: The Role of Plant–Microbial Interactions and Seed Provenance in Ecological Restoration. Natural Areas Journal.  42(2): 152-159. https://doi.org/10.3375/21-42.
Citations
https://www.fs.usda.gov/research/treesearch/64590