In hopes that you will forgive me for an impudent layperson's intrusion of a
favorite quotation:

"People have forgotten this truth,"the fox said. "But you mustn't forget it.
You become responsible forever for what you've tamed."

                                                The Little Prince
[from A Guide for Grown-ups; essential wisdom from the collected works of
Antoine de Saint-Exupery, Harcourt, 2002]


----- Original Message ----- From: "Warren W. Aney" <a...@coho.net>
To: <ECOLOG-L@LISTSERV.UMD.EDU>
Sent: Sunday, January 30, 2011 12:14 AM
Subject: Re: [ECOLOG-L] Conservation or just gardening?


Consider fisheries as a good example of overlap between conservation and
gardening:
Fish farms are 100% gardening.  Rearing fish to adult size in hatcheries
so
as to provide catchable trout is almost 100% gardening. Using fish
hatcheries to provide releasable smolts so as to maintain harvestable runs
of salmon is still principally gardening. Using fish hatcheries to
re-establish self-maintaining wild populations is partially gardening and
partially conservation.  Less gardening and more conservation occurs when
wild fish are trapped and relocated to re-establish self-maintaining
populations.  Habitat restoration and fish harvest restriction is
partially
gardening but mostly conservation.  Managing and maintaining a
self-sustaining population through habitat protection and harvest controls
is conservation.

The pros for gardening in the above cases?  Plenty of fish for the market
and the creel; the fish on your table costs less. Cons? Pollution, disease
spread, genetic contamination, competition with conservation efforts.

The pros for conservation?  Self-sustaining, balanced and healthy aquatic
systems that are more stable over time and less expensive to manage.
Cons?
Fewer fish for the market and the creel; the fish on your table costs more
(but can be of higher quality); potentially less funding for conservation
because of reduced fishing license and fee collections.

I think we're in the process of transitioning to fisheries based on more
conservation and less gardening, at least here in the Pacific Northwest.
Our markets feature wild-caught salmon coming mostly from self-sustaining
Alaska fisheries (although some are also coming from hatchery supported
Pacific coast fisheries). Trout anglers are becoming more satisfied with
catch and release fisheries and salmon anglers have to release wild-stock
fish in many fisheries.

But this transitioning must occur more internationally and can probably
only
occur if we recognize and adjust to limits of growth and consumption.
That
is probably the looming cloud that could make the gardening vs.
conservation
discussion futile.

Warren W. Aney
Senior Wildlife Ecologist
Tigard, Oregon


-----Original Message-----
From: Wayne Tyson [mailto:landr...@cox.net]
Sent: Friday, 28 January, 2011 20:14
To: Warren W. Aney; ECOLOG-L@LISTSERV.UMD.EDU
Subject: Re: [ECOLOG-L] Conservation or just gardening?

Ecolog:

In many ways, I like Warren's comment better than mine; it's certainly
more
concise.

I'd like to hear more about the overlap, especially with regard to its
pros
and cons, with tradeoffs, and transitions toward
transformations--especially

culturally.

WT


----- Original Message ----- From: "Warren W. Aney" <a...@coho.net>
To: <ECOLOG-L@LISTSERV.UMD.EDU>
Sent: Friday, January 28, 2011 3:07 PM
Subject: Re: [ECOLOG-L] Conservation or just gardening?


I've weighed in on this before, but this time let me present what may be
an
oversimplification -- to me the defining difference between gardening and
conservation is based on intent:
The intent of conservation is to maintain or attain ecosystem complexity
through management protection, enhancement and/or restoration to achieve
naturally maintained ecocentric stability, diversity and productivity.
The intent of gardening is to simplify ecosystems through intensive and
continuous management to achieve human-maintained anthropocentric output
and/or attractiveness.
And yes, they can and do overlap sometimes.

Warren W. Aney
Senior Wildlife Ecologist
Tigard, Oregon


-----Original Message-----
From: Ecological Society of America: grants, jobs, news
[mailto:ECOLOG-L@LISTSERV.UMD.EDU] On Behalf Of Wayne Tyson
Sent: Thursday, 27 January, 2011 17:54
To: ECOLOG-L@LISTSERV.UMD.EDU
Subject: [ECOLOG-L] Conservation or just gardening? Re: [ECOLOG-L]
ECOLOG-L
Digest - 22 Jan 2011 to 23 Jan 2011 (#2011-23)

Each decision about species or habitat intervention is (or should be)
context driven. Generalizations don't hack it in science, and it's high
time

journalists gave them up in the "popular" press. Over 4,000 words of
"provocative" prose is more than naive in this Age of the Twit, though,
and
if the authors are serious about investigating  the details of this very
serious subject, they should engage, not instruct. Forums like Ecolog
could,

if respondents would stick to the question and the responses to it, make
a
real contribution to sorting out the facts from the weedy patches of
opining.

I, and I presume Jason, continue to await an answer to the original
question.

WT


----- Original Message ----- From: "austin ritter" <austin.rit...@gmail.com>
To: <ECOLOG-L@LISTSERV.UMD.EDU>
Sent: Thursday, January 27, 2011 1:19 PM
Subject: Re: [ECOLOG-L] ECOLOG-L Digest - 22 Jan 2011 to 23 Jan 2011
(#2011-23)


A week or so ago Jason asked: "Are there any recognized criteria for
determining the boundary between
conservation and gardening?"

This article from High Country News seem extremely relevant:
http://www.hcn.org/issues/363/17481. The artical is call *Unnatural
preservations* and the thesis is: "In the age of global warming,
public-land
managers face a stark choice: They can let national parks and other
wildlands lose their most cherished wildlife. Or they can become
gardeners
and zookeepers." Its a provocative read no matter what you conservation
goal
is.

-Austin Ritter
Middlebury College



Date:    Sat, 22 Jan 2011 21:52:57 -0800
From:    Wayne Tyson <landr...@cox.net>
Subject: Re: Conservation or just gardening?

Jason,

You have asked such good questions that, even though you have received a
plethora of very thoughtful responses, I'm going to take another crack
at
being more directly responsive and insert some additional thoughts into
your
text in an attempt to keep myself from wandering off the subject. I'll
put
my responses into double-brackets  with my initials [[like this WT]] to
minimize confusion in case others may wish to add their own comments or
correct mine. At some point, I hope you will write a summary statement
to
give us your own answers once you have thought about the questions
again.

----- Original Message -----
From: "Jason Hernandez" <jason.hernande...@yahoo.com>
To: <ECOLOG-L@LISTSERV.UMD.EDU>
Sent: Monday, January 17, 2011 5:08 PM
Subject: [ECOLOG-L] Conservation or just gardening?


This question is inspired by a conversation with a former employer. When
do
our interventions cease to be conservation and become gardening?

[[I, and perhaps others, may have jumped to conclusions about what you
mean
by "conservation" and "gardening." I'd be interested in your own
definitions
of the terms in the sense of your original intent. WT]]

For the sake of argument, I was taking the purist position: that
ideally,
we
want to be able to put a fence around a natural area and walk away,
letting
nature manage it.

[[Again, I think we should consider just what you mean by "purist" and
"fence" and "letting nature manage it." WT]]

But as my employer rightly pointed out, that is just not a realistic
expectation in the 21st century, what with invasive species, systemic
pollution, human pressures on surrounding areas, and countless other
factors
which will not go away. But of course, she also knew that there is a
degree
of intervention which crosses the line from conservation to gardening,
that
is, caring for a population that no longer participates in its ecosystem
processes.

[[And, of course, I/we might have had some difficulty interpreting the
context of "intervention" and where "the line" is. WT]]

There is, of course, a continuum of interventions.

[[This may be a crucial point that requires more attention. WT]]

Removal of invasive competitors is a relatively light intervention;
growing
seedlings in a greenhouse and then planting them out is more intensive;
maintaining an in vitro germplasm collection still more intensive.

[[This is a key statement, not so much a question, but its implications
may
be worth far deeper attention than what first meets the mind. For
example,
your statement brings to mind the intervention that produced the
"invasive
competitors" in the first place. Some (e.g., Ewell, 1987)  have
suggested
that resistance to invasion is one of the tests of ecosystem restoration
and
ecological theory, so the first "intervention" to consider might be the
event or series of events that caused the "invasive competitors" in the
first place (or the uncounted or uncountable "places").

[[To keep from spinning on the tip of this point where angels fear to
dance,
let's say, for example that the "pristine" conditions was first
"invaded"
by
a cow brought into, say, California by an invading Spaniard and turned
loose
in an ecosystem that had not evolved under such a critter. The ecosystem
did
not evolve under the influence of her shuffling gait, her style of
grazing,
her fecal matter, the Mediterranean diet of oats and associated weed
contaminants therein, and perhaps the strains of bacteria, ad infinitum,
that were included as unprecedented change-agents in this particular
ecosystem. Oats and their fellow-travelers almost immediately reared
their
ugly heads and began populating the hoof-ploughed ground,
opportunistically
spreading and multiplying where conditions where right for their
germination, growth, survival, reproduction, and distribution.

[[Fast-forward a couple of centuries or so, and the ripple effects of
that
initial invasion have grown in number, diversity, and extent such that
colorful names like  "rip-gut brome" and "cheat-grass" have come to be
accepted as "part" of "the" ecosystem, so numerous and widespread they
have
become. The "removal" of these "invasive competitors" has come to be
considered impossible, yet a select few of their fellow-travelers have
been
targeted for "removal." "Bioxenophobia" has become big business, helping
to
inflate the profits of Big Chem and countless lesser players, and
promises
of cures to these "competitors'" influences continue to ring grant cash
registers across the land, under the assumption that an infinity of
studies
and "removals" will someday remove the menace. Studies of ecosystem
recoveries, some spontaneous, some stimulated by well-calculated further
interventions, do not get much, if any, funding. Advances and declines
over
time of "weed" populations do not get much attention, and the cows are
still
a-lowin' on the mountain-side. WT]]

Are there any recognized criteria for determining the boundary between
conservation and gardening?

[[Excuse me if I've missed it--and please point it out--but I don't
think
anyone really answered this one very directly; I certainly didn't do an
adequate job. But certainly it is the responsibility of ecologists to
confront that issue directly and unequivocally define that boundary. To
me,
gardening is cultivating--replacing a self-sufficient ecosystem with a
dependent assemblage of organisms of our choice, not accepting the
organisms
whose requirements match the uncultivated habitat. I hope others can
replace
or revise it with something better. WT]]

And if a species is beyond saving with conservation, how worthwhile is
it
to
save that species with gardening? Can we determine when a species' only
hope
is gardening?

[[Instead of trying to answer this question directly, simply,
theoretically,
I just went off on one of my favorite rant-- about the California
condor--I
apologize. I think you have defined it pretty well, Jason; I would only
add
that "we" need more science and less guesswork--and certainly less
politics--so that we can start "gardening" well ahead of the precipice,
as
when the breeding population is so low and the wild population is in
steep,
continuous decline. And as was so well pointed out by McCallum, since
the
cost of preventing extinction pales against the cost of causing it,
doing
so
should be (totally, dude) a no-brainer. Ecologists just have to work
harder
and harder and never, never give up in providing evidence and persuasion
so
that more and more people embrace that no-brainer. WT]]

Jason Hernandez
Biological Science Technician, USDA Forest Service


Ewel, J. J. 1987. Restoration is the ultimate test of ecological theory.
pp.
31-33 in: W. R.Jordan, M. E. Gilpin, and J. D. Aber (eds.). Restoration
Ecology: a synthetic approach to ecological research. Cambridge
University
Press, Cambridge.


--
Austin Ritter
Middlebury College
Cell: 410.960.0075



----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----



No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 8.5.449 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/3402 - Release Date: 01/25/11
07:34:00


----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----



No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 8.5.449 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/3408 - Release Date: 01/28/11
09:14:00

Reply via email to