Comment by gdubs
7 months ago
This is a great question. We've restored over 20 acres of native ecosystems at our farm in the PNW, and one thing that's clear is that some conservationists are attempting to essentially create a painting of a particular moment in time. Others are more pragmatic and flexible — not seeing all non-native elements as "bad".
I think where I come down is trying to remove elements that threaten to take over and destroy the balance. Or restore elements that will help re-establish balance. And it doesn't have to all be "native".
And there are some natives like poison oak that I'll get rid of because they're obnoxious and will ruin people's experience of nature. And people's experience with nature matters because that's a big part of how you win people over and get them to support nature restoration work.
What is "balance"?
Equilibrium, steady state, stable, self healing/correcting, sustainable, resilient to disturbance...
dynamic state where the interactions between living organisms and their environment are in harmony, allowing for the continuation of essential ecological functions.