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Using historical woodland creation to construct a long‐term,large‐scale natural experiment: the WrEN project
Authors:Kevin Watts  Elisa Fuentes‐Montemayor  Nicholas A Macgregor  Victor Peredo‐Alvarez  Mark Ferryman  Chloe Bellamy  Nigel Brown  Kirsty J Park
Affiliation:1. Forest Research, Farnham, Surrey, UK;2. Biological and Environmental Sciences, School of Natural Sciences, University of Stirling, Stirling, UK;3. Natural England, London, UK;4. Durrell Institute of Conservation and Ecology (DICE), School of Anthropology and Conservation, University of Kent, Canterbury, UK;5. Forest Research, Roslin, Midlothian, UK;6. Natural England, Peterborough, UK
Abstract:Natural experiments have been proposed as a way of complementing manipulative experiments to improve ecological understanding and guide management. There is a pressing need for evidence from such studies to inform a shift to landscape‐scale conservation, including the design of ecological networks. Although this shift has been widely embraced by conservation communities worldwide, the empirical evidence is limited and equivocal, and may be limiting effective conservation. We present principles for well‐designed natural experiments to inform landscape‐scale conservation and outline how they are being applied in the WrEN project, which is studying the effects of 160 years of woodland creation on biodiversity in UK landscapes. We describe the study areas and outline the systematic process used to select suitable historical woodland creation sites based on key site‐ and landscape‐scale variables – including size, age, and proximity to other woodland. We present the results of an analysis to explore variation in these variables across sites to test their suitability as a basis for a natural experiment. Our results confirm that this landscape satisfies the principles we have identified and provides an ideal study system for a long‐term, large‐scale natural experiment to explore how woodland biodiversity is affected by different site and landscape attributes. The WrEN sites are now being surveyed for a wide selection of species that are likely to respond differently to site‐ and landscape‐scale attributes and at different spatial and temporal scales. The results from WrEN will help develop detailed recommendations to guide landscape‐scale conservation, including the design of ecological networks. We also believe that the approach presented demonstrates the wider utility of well‐designed natural experiments to improve our understanding of ecological systems and inform policy and practice.
Keywords:Ecological networks  landscape‐scale conservation  natural experiment  woodland creation  WrEN project
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