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Research ArticleArticlesC

Using Landscape Context to Guide Ecological Restoration: An Approach for Pits and Quarries in Ontario

Robert C. Corry, Raffaele Lafortezza, Robert D. Brown, Natasha Kenny and P. Jill Robertson
Ecological Restoration, June 2008, 26 (2) 120-127; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/er.26.2.120
Robert C. Corry
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Raffaele Lafortezza
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Robert D. Brown
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Natasha Kenny
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P. Jill Robertson
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Abstract

The landscape has a dramatic effect on a site’s ecological and social function. Landscape context and pattern are important considerations in ecological restoration for their effects on rehabilitation design and ecological function. In Ontario, Canada, there are more than 5,300 active aggregate mining sites, equivalent to a total area of over 70 square kilometers. Rehabilitation of inactive pits is required by law, but rehabilitation efforts rarely attempt to restore ecological function to a site, and even more rarely consider the ecological implications of landscape context. The size, spatial extent, and nonrandom distribution of aggregate extraction sites in Ontario offer opportunities to restore ecological functions through cooperative rehabilitation, where landowners and licensed aggregate extractors try to achieve better ecological outcomes. In order to illustrate how landscape context can make a meaningful contribution to rehabilitation design and ecological restoration of pit and quarry sites in Ontario and in other settings, we review methods of assessing critical aspects of landscape context, including patterns of habitats (mosaics), interpatch movements and dispersal (connectivity and permeability), and the heterogeneity of microclimates (niche diversity). We illustrate the potential of this approach with the example of the Karner blue butterfly. The described project may inform restoration approaches for other land uses and landscape contexts.

  • aggregate (gravel) extraction
  • cost-surface analysis
  • Karner blue butterfly (Lycaeides melissa samuelis)
  • landscape pattern metrics
  • microclimate

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Ecological Restoration
Vol. 26, Issue 2
1 Jun 2008
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Using Landscape Context to Guide Ecological Restoration: An Approach for Pits and Quarries in Ontario
Robert C. Corry, Raffaele Lafortezza, Robert D. Brown, Natasha Kenny, P. Jill Robertson
Ecological Restoration Jun 2008, 26 (2) 120-127; DOI: 10.3368/er.26.2.120

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Using Landscape Context to Guide Ecological Restoration: An Approach for Pits and Quarries in Ontario
Robert C. Corry, Raffaele Lafortezza, Robert D. Brown, Natasha Kenny, P. Jill Robertson
Ecological Restoration Jun 2008, 26 (2) 120-127; DOI: 10.3368/er.26.2.120
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Cited By...

  • Core Knowledge Domains of Landscape Architecture
  • Testing the Microclimatic Habitat Design Framework in Abandoned Sand and Gravel Extraction Sites Using the Karner Blue Butterfly
  • Cultural Acceptability of Alternative Pit and Quarry Rehabilitations
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Keywords

  • aggregate (gravel) extraction
  • cost-surface analysis
  • Karner blue butterfly (Lycaeides melissa samuelis)
  • landscape pattern metrics
  • microclimate
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