Abstract
Reintroductions and associated methods have been recommended as techniques for mitigating or redressing threatened plant species declines for several decades. Their use continues to increase as an option for overcoming problems associated with habitat loss, habitat fragmentation, and reproductive isolation (Quinn et al. 1994). However, these approaches have been criticized for the lack of monitoring and central recording, inappropriateness of the action due to genetic considerations, a lack of demographic knowledge of the donor populations, and inadequate information on the species’ habitat needs (Pearman and Walker 2004).
This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution.
References
Quinn, R. M., J. H. Lawton, B. C. Eversham, and S. N. Wood. 1994. The biogeography of scarce vascular plants in Britain with respect to habitat preference, dispersal ability and reproductive biology. Biological Conservation 70:149–57.
Pearman, D. A., and K. Walker. 2004. Rare plant introductions in the UK: Creative conservation or wildflower gardening? British Wildlife 15:174–82.
IUCN. 1998b. Species Survival Commission Reintroduction Specialist Group Members Database. Accessed February 1, 2011, http://www.iucnsscrsg.org/rsg_database.php.
Higgins, J. P. T., and S. G. Thompson. 2004. Controlling the risk of spurious findings from meta-regression. Statistics in Medicine 23:1663–82.
StataCorp, USA. 2011. Stata version 11.0.
Udvardy, M. 1975. A Classification of the Biogeographical Provinces of the World. Man and Biosphere Programme. IUCN Occasional Paper No. 18. Morges, Switzerland.
Adamec, L., and J. Lev. 1999. The introduction of the aquatic carnivorous plant Aldrovanda vesiculosa to new potential sites in the Czech Republic: A five-year investigation. Folia Geobotanica 34:299–305.
Adamec, L. 2005. Ten years after the introduction of Aldrovanda vesiculosa to the Czech Republic. Acta Botanica Gallica 152:239–45.
Falk, D. A., C. I. Millar, and M. Olwell. 1996. Restoring Diversity: Strategies for Reintroduction of Endangered Plants. Washington, DC: Island Press.
IUCN. 1998a. Guidelines for Reintroductions. Prepared by IUCN/SSC Re-introduction Specialist Group. Gland, Switzerland and Cambridge, UK: IUCN.
Stockwell, C. A., P. Andrew, A. P. Hendry, and M. T. Kinnison. 2003. Contemporary evolution meets conservation biology. Trends in Ecology & Evolution 18:94–101.
Jusaitis, M. 2005. Translocation trials confirm specific factors affecting the establishment of three endangered plant species. Ecological Management and Restoration 6:61–67.
Batty, A. L., M. C. Brundrett, K. W. Dixon, and K. Sivasithamparam. 2006b. New methods to improve symbiotic propagation of temperate terrestrial orchid seedlings from axenic culture to soil. Australian Journal of Botany 54:367–74.
Drayton, B., and R. B. Primack. 2000. Rates of success in the reintroduction by four methods of several perennial plant species in eastern Massachusetts. Rhodora 102:299–331.
Leonard, Y. 2006a. Reintroduction of perennial knawel Scleranthus perennis prostratus to sheep-grazed grassheath at West Stow, Suffolk, England. Conservation Evidence 3:15–16.
Leonard, Y. 2006b. Soil disturbance & seedling transplanting as a method of reintroduction of perennial knawel Scleranthus perennis prostratus at Icklingham, Suffolk, England. Conservation Evidence 3:17–18.
Maschinski, J., and J. Duquesnel. 2007. Successful reintroductions of the endangered long-lived Sargent’s cherry palm, Pseudophoenix sargentii, in the Florida Keys. Biological Conservation 134:122–29.
Fiedler, P. L., and R. D. Laven. 1996. Selecting reintroduction sites. In Restoring Diversity: Strategies for Reintroduction of Endangered Plants, edited by D. A. Falk, C. I. Millar, and M. Olwell, 157–170. Washington, DC: Island Press.
Arnold, C., A. Schnitzler, A. Douard, R. Peter, and F. Gillet. 2005. Is there a future for wild grapevine (Vitis vinifera subsp. silvestris) in the Rhine Valley? Biodiversity and Conservation 14:1507–23.
Mehrhoff, L. A. 1996. FOCUS: Reintroducing endangered Hawaiian plants. In Restoring Diversity: Strategies for Reintroduction of Endangered Plants, edited by D. A. Falk, C. I. Millar, and M. Olwell, 101–20. Washington, DC: Island Press.
Dalrymple, S. E., and A. Broome. 2010. The importance of donor population identity and habitat type when creating new populations of small cow-wheat Melampyrum sylvaticum from seed in Perthshire, Scotland. Conservation Evidence 7:1–8.
Center for Plant Conservation. 2009. CPC International Reintroduction Registry. Accessed September 1, 2009, http://www.centerforplantconservation.org/reintroduction/MN_ReintroductionEntrance.asp.
Dalrymple, S. E., A. Broome, and P. Gallagher. 2008. Re-introduction of small cow- wheat into the Scottish Highlands, UK. In Global Re-introduction Perspectives: Re- introduction Case-Studies from around the World, edited by P. S. Soorae, 221–24. Abu Dhabi, UAE: IUCN/SSC Re-Introduction Specialist Group.
Wacholder, S. 1986. Binomial regression in GLIM: Estimating risk ratios and risk differences. American Journal of Epidemiology 123:174–84.
DerSimonian, R., and N. Laird. 1986. Meta-analysis in clinical trials. Controlled Clinical Trials 7:177–88.
Collaboration for Environmental Evidence. 2009. Statistical Methods Group. Accessed February 1, 2011, http://www.environmentalevidence.org.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2012 Island Press
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Dalrymple, S.E., Banks, E., Stewart, G.B., Pullin, A.S. (2012). A Meta-Analysis of Threatened Plant Reintroductions from across the Globe. In: Maschinski, J., Haskins, K.E., Raven, P.H. (eds) Plant Reintroduction in a Changing Climate. The Science and Practice of Ecological Restoration. Island Press, Washington, DC. https://doi.org/10.5822/978-1-61091-183-2_3
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5822/978-1-61091-183-2_3
Publisher Name: Island Press, Washington, DC
Print ISBN: 978-1-59726-343-6
Online ISBN: 978-1-61091-183-2
eBook Packages: Earth and Environmental ScienceEarth and Environmental Science (R0)