生态恢复与人类世

A. Akhtarkhavari, B. Richardson
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摘要

生态恢复从未像现在这样重要,但不协调的是,在环境法中仍然是一个低优先级。大多数决策者认为,人类世日益加剧的动荡是更加关注未来以防止进一步退化的理由。气候变化、物种灭绝、塑料垃圾海洋和其他生态损失,作为一个永远真实的反乌托邦,隐约出现在地平线上。我们不能忽视阻止维持生命的生物圈耗散的紧迫性,但同样,我们也应该治愈过去的损失,以便使维持仍然更加可行。人类世不是最近才出现的现象,而是源于人类造成的环境变化的漫长历史,这种变化至少始于两个世纪前工业化的开始,也可能更早于农业的出现。在为环境法提供概念上的压载物的可持续发展理念的庇护下,监管机构专注于预防未来的逆境,而不是解决过去的愚蠢行为。法律优先考虑的通常是避免、减轻或适应新的生态影响,而不是修复过去的破坏。这种立场也可能在情感上和文化上削弱人们的环境管理意识,因为人们认为自然有能力通过生态演替、物种进化等过程被动地恢复自己。受损或退化的生态系统有时可以通过其自身的过程进行恢复,如自然在火灾、洪水或干旱后的反弹;然而,有些恢复可能实际上是不可能的,例如当入侵物种从根本上改变了生态平衡或有毒污染物嵌入土地或水中时。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Ecological restoration and the Anthropocene
Ecological recovery has never been more important yet incongruously remains a low priority in environmental law. Most policy-makers perceive the intensifying upheavals of the Anthropocene as reasons to pay ever more attention to the future so as to forestall further degradation. Climate change, species extinctions, oceans of plastic debris and other ecological tolls loom on the horizon as an ever-real dystopia. We cannot ignore the urgency to halt dissipation of the life-sustaining biosphere, yet equally we should heal past losses in order to make sustaining what remains more viable. The Anthropocene is not a recent phenomenon but derives from a long history of anthropogenic environmental change that began at least with the onset of industrialisation two centuries ago and possibly earlier with the advent of agriculture. Under the aegis of the philosophy of sustainable development, which provides environmental law’s conceptual ballast, regulators dwell on forestalling future adversity rather than addressing past follies. The legal priority is commonly to avert, mitigate or adapt to new ecological impacts rather than to repair past damage. This stance may also emotionally and culturally weaken people’s sense of environmental stewardship on the presumption that nature has the capacity to passively restore itself through processes of ecological succession, species evolution and so forth. Damaged or degraded ecosystems sometimes can recover through their own processes, as evident in how nature rebounds after fires, floods or droughts; however, some recovery may be effectively impossible, such as when invasive species have fundamentally altered ecological equilibriums or toxic pollutants become embedded in land or water.
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