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Author(s) -
Gianni Lobosco
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
convergências
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2184-0180
pISSN - 1646-9054
DOI - 10.53681/c1514225187514391s.25.9
Subject(s) - threatened species , peat , habitat , afforestation , ecology , restoration ecology , wilderness , abiotic component , landscape architecture , tourism , geography , agroforestry , environmental science , environmental resource management , archaeology , biology
The essay discusses the theoretical implications of ecological restoration in landscape architecture. The study presents a management plan for highly damaged peatlands in the Isle of Skye in Scotland, where the habitat is threatened by a radical forestation process. Being a natural carbon stock, damaged peatlands are a major source of greenhouse gas emissions. The project suggests gradually turning the case-study area's economy from tree farming to tourism, making the most out of the unique biodiversity of peatlands. The proposal traces a chronological activation plan of a touristic network that will run in parallel with the restoration of peats, native broadleaf forests, heather and cotton-grass meadows. Depending on the ability to recover of different soils, the restoration plan intends to gradually activate new dynamics in the landscape. The result is a stable “novel ecosystem” whose key interactions and processes are induced by new biotic and abiotic conditions. The article investigates and discusses possible strategies to develop a new kind of wilderness that differs from any previous condition and emerges from an alternative land use.

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