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  2. Ecosynthesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecosynthesis

    It aims to aid ecological restoration, the practice of renewing and restoring degraded, damaged, or destroyed ecosystems and habitats in the environment by active human intervention and action. Humans use ecosynthesis to make environments more suitable for life, through restoration ecology (introduced species, vegetation mapping, habitat ...

  3. Ecosystem management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecosystem_management

    Peter Brussard and colleagues emphasize that ecosystem management balances preserving ecosystem health while sustaining human needs. [11] As a concept of natural resource management, ecosystem management remains both ambiguous and controversial, in part because some of its formulations rest on contested policy and scientific assertions. [12]

  4. Overabundant species - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overabundant_species

    In biology, overabundant species refers to an excessive number of individuals [1] and occurs when the normal population density has been exceeded. Increase in animal populations is influenced by a variety of factors, some of which include habitat destruction or augmentation by human activity, the introduction of invasive species and the reintroduction of threatened species to protected reserves.

  5. Introduced species - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Introduced_species

    Introduced species are essentially "non-native" species. Invasive species are those introduced species that spread widely or quickly and cause harm, be that to the environment, [10] human health, other valued resources, or the economy. There have been calls from scientists to consider a species "invasive" only in terms of their spread and ...

  6. Naturalisation (biology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naturalisation_(biology)

    The concerned species are thus: either introduced voluntarily into an ecosystem where they are not native; either accidentally introduced or become feral; or by naturally following human migratory flows by commensalism (eg: arrival of house sparrow in Western Europe following Huns, and previously in Eastern Europe from Asia Minor in Antiquity).

  7. Invasive species - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Invasive_species

    An invasive species is an introduced species that harms its new environment. [2] Invasive species adversely affect habitats and bioregions, causing ecological, environmental, and/or economic damage. The term can also be used for native species that become harmful to their native environment after human alterations to its food web. Since the ...

  8. Ecosystem-based management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecosystem-based_management

    The systemic origins of ecosystem-based management are rooted in the ecosystem management policy applied to the Great Lakes of North America in the late 1970s. The legislation created, the "Great Lakes Basin and the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement of 1978", was based on the claim that "no park is an island", with the purpose to show how strict protection of the area is not the best method ...

  9. Sustainability and environmental management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sustainability_and...

    [4] [5] Management of the global atmosphere now involves assessment of all aspects of the carbon cycle to identify opportunities to address human-induced climate change and this has become a major focus of scientific research because of the potential catastrophic effects on biodiversity and human communities. Other human impacts on the ...