Scaling up the global reef restoration activity: avoiding ecological imperialism and ongoing colonialism

The health and condition of the world’s reefs are in steep decline. This has triggered the development of fledgling micro-scale coral reef restoration projects along many reef coastlines. However, it is increasingly recognised that the scale and productivity of micro-scale coral gardening projects w...

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Published in:PLOS ONE
Main Authors: Gibbs, Mark T., Gibbs, Bridget L., Newlands, Maxine, Ivey, Jordan
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Public Library of Science 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/67931/1/journal.pone.0250870.pdf
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spelling ftjamescook:oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:67931 2024-02-11T10:03:52+01:00 Scaling up the global reef restoration activity: avoiding ecological imperialism and ongoing colonialism Gibbs, Mark T. Gibbs, Bridget L. Newlands, Maxine Ivey, Jordan 2021 application/pdf https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/67931/1/journal.pone.0250870.pdf unknown Public Library of Science https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0250870 https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/67931/ https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/67931/1/journal.pone.0250870.pdf Gibbs, Mark T., Gibbs, Bridget L., Newlands, Maxine, and Ivey, Jordan (2021) Scaling up the global reef restoration activity: avoiding ecological imperialism and ongoing colonialism. PLoS ONE, 16 (5). e0250870. open Article PeerReviewed 2021 ftjamescook https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0250870 2024-01-22T23:48:11Z The health and condition of the world’s reefs are in steep decline. This has triggered the development of fledgling micro-scale coral reef restoration projects along many reef coastlines. However, it is increasingly recognised that the scale and productivity of micro-scale coral gardening projects will be insufficient to meet the growing global threats to reefs. More recently, efforts to develop and implement restoration techniques for application at regional scales have been pursued by research organisations. Coral reefs are mostly located in the unindustrialised world. Yet, most of the funding, and scientific and engineering method development for larger-scale methods will likely be sourced and created in the industrialised world. Therefore, the development of the emerging at-scale global reef restoration sector will inevitably involve the transfer of methods, approaches, finances, labour and skills from the industrialised world to the unindustrialised world. This opens the door to the industrialised world negatively impacting the unindustrialised world and, in some cases, First Nations peoples. In Western scientific parlance, ecological imperialism occurs when people from industrialised nations seek to recreate environments and ecosystems in unindustrialised nations that are familiar and comfortable to them. How a coral reef ’should’ look depends on one’s background and perspective. While predominately Western scientific approaches provide guidance on the ecological principles for reef restoration, these methods might not be applicable in every scenario in unindustrialised nations. Imposing such views on Indigenous coastal communities without the local technical and leadership resources to scale-up restoration of their reefs can lead to unwanted consequences. The objective of this paper is to introduce this real and emerging risk into the broader reef restoration discussion. Article in Journal/Newspaper First Nations James Cook University, Australia: ResearchOnline@JCU PLOS ONE 16 5 e0250870
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collection James Cook University, Australia: ResearchOnline@JCU
op_collection_id ftjamescook
language unknown
description The health and condition of the world’s reefs are in steep decline. This has triggered the development of fledgling micro-scale coral reef restoration projects along many reef coastlines. However, it is increasingly recognised that the scale and productivity of micro-scale coral gardening projects will be insufficient to meet the growing global threats to reefs. More recently, efforts to develop and implement restoration techniques for application at regional scales have been pursued by research organisations. Coral reefs are mostly located in the unindustrialised world. Yet, most of the funding, and scientific and engineering method development for larger-scale methods will likely be sourced and created in the industrialised world. Therefore, the development of the emerging at-scale global reef restoration sector will inevitably involve the transfer of methods, approaches, finances, labour and skills from the industrialised world to the unindustrialised world. This opens the door to the industrialised world negatively impacting the unindustrialised world and, in some cases, First Nations peoples. In Western scientific parlance, ecological imperialism occurs when people from industrialised nations seek to recreate environments and ecosystems in unindustrialised nations that are familiar and comfortable to them. How a coral reef ’should’ look depends on one’s background and perspective. While predominately Western scientific approaches provide guidance on the ecological principles for reef restoration, these methods might not be applicable in every scenario in unindustrialised nations. Imposing such views on Indigenous coastal communities without the local technical and leadership resources to scale-up restoration of their reefs can lead to unwanted consequences. The objective of this paper is to introduce this real and emerging risk into the broader reef restoration discussion.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Gibbs, Mark T.
Gibbs, Bridget L.
Newlands, Maxine
Ivey, Jordan
spellingShingle Gibbs, Mark T.
Gibbs, Bridget L.
Newlands, Maxine
Ivey, Jordan
Scaling up the global reef restoration activity: avoiding ecological imperialism and ongoing colonialism
author_facet Gibbs, Mark T.
Gibbs, Bridget L.
Newlands, Maxine
Ivey, Jordan
author_sort Gibbs, Mark T.
title Scaling up the global reef restoration activity: avoiding ecological imperialism and ongoing colonialism
title_short Scaling up the global reef restoration activity: avoiding ecological imperialism and ongoing colonialism
title_full Scaling up the global reef restoration activity: avoiding ecological imperialism and ongoing colonialism
title_fullStr Scaling up the global reef restoration activity: avoiding ecological imperialism and ongoing colonialism
title_full_unstemmed Scaling up the global reef restoration activity: avoiding ecological imperialism and ongoing colonialism
title_sort scaling up the global reef restoration activity: avoiding ecological imperialism and ongoing colonialism
publisher Public Library of Science
publishDate 2021
url https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/67931/1/journal.pone.0250870.pdf
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0250870
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/67931/
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/67931/1/journal.pone.0250870.pdf
Gibbs, Mark T., Gibbs, Bridget L., Newlands, Maxine, and Ivey, Jordan (2021) Scaling up the global reef restoration activity: avoiding ecological imperialism and ongoing colonialism. PLoS ONE, 16 (5). e0250870.
op_rights open
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0250870
container_title PLOS ONE
container_volume 16
container_issue 5
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