TY - JOUR
T1 - Practitioner tools for addressing knowing–doing gaps in seed-based restoration
AU - Young, Kristina E.
AU - Bishop, Tara B.B.
AU - Johnson, Danielle B.
AU - Gunnell, Kevin
AU - Faist, Akasha
AU - Garbowski, Magda
AU - Kildisheva, Olga
AU - Neumann, Danielle
AU - Gornish, Elise
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Society for Ecological Restoration. This article has been contributed to by U.S. Government employees and their work is in the public domain in the USA.
PY - 2025/5
Y1 - 2025/5
N2 - The increasing impact of global change drivers, including climate change, wildfires, and invasive plant species, is significantly transforming native plant communities in the western United States, prompting a strong focus on ecological restoration. One prominent restoration strategy involves using native seeds. However, achieving successful seed-based restoration faces several ecological and logistical challenges. Ecological obstacles can include seed predation, unsuccessful germination, and early seedling mortality, while logistical issues can involve ensuring the availability and suitability of seeds for specific sites. To address these challenges, a range of tools, including species selection tools, climate-adapted seed tools, seed handling resources, trait databases, and restoration information portals, have been developed to assist practitioners. Despite these resources, a significant gap exists between the research produced by scientists and its application by practitioners. Bridging this “knowing–doing” gap requires making information more available, relevant, current, and understandable for end users. Our goal is to highlight online tools that can address the knowing–doing gap in seed-based restoration to provide a resource for individuals who are interested in: (1) learning about available tools and (2) creating tools for practitioners. Efforts to improve tool usability, provide training, and encourage knowledge exchange are essential to enhancing restoration outcomes and effectively using native seeds to mitigate the effects of global change.
AB - The increasing impact of global change drivers, including climate change, wildfires, and invasive plant species, is significantly transforming native plant communities in the western United States, prompting a strong focus on ecological restoration. One prominent restoration strategy involves using native seeds. However, achieving successful seed-based restoration faces several ecological and logistical challenges. Ecological obstacles can include seed predation, unsuccessful germination, and early seedling mortality, while logistical issues can involve ensuring the availability and suitability of seeds for specific sites. To address these challenges, a range of tools, including species selection tools, climate-adapted seed tools, seed handling resources, trait databases, and restoration information portals, have been developed to assist practitioners. Despite these resources, a significant gap exists between the research produced by scientists and its application by practitioners. Bridging this “knowing–doing” gap requires making information more available, relevant, current, and understandable for end users. Our goal is to highlight online tools that can address the knowing–doing gap in seed-based restoration to provide a resource for individuals who are interested in: (1) learning about available tools and (2) creating tools for practitioners. Efforts to improve tool usability, provide training, and encourage knowledge exchange are essential to enhancing restoration outcomes and effectively using native seeds to mitigate the effects of global change.
KW - climate-informed seed selection
KW - ecological bottlenecks in restoration
KW - knowing–doing gap solutions
KW - native plant material development
KW - practitioner-relevant restoration tools
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105005505806&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/rec.70043
DO - 10.1111/rec.70043
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:105005505806
SN - 1061-2971
VL - 33
JO - Restoration Ecology
JF - Restoration Ecology
IS - 4
M1 - e70043
ER -