4.7 Editorial Material

Using leading and lagging indicators for forest restoration

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY
Volume 58, Issue 9, Pages 1806-1812

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2664.13938

Keywords

adaptive management; Bonn Challenge; community forestry; FLR; landscape approach; monitoring and evaluation; reforestation; UN Decade in Ecosystem Restoration

Funding

  1. University of the Sunshine Coast
  2. U.S. NSF Coupled Natural and Human Systems Program [DEB1313788]
  3. Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research [ASEM/2010/050, ASEM/2016/103]
  4. National Socio-Environmental Synthesis Center (SESYNC)
  5. National Science Foundation [DBI-1052875]

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Leading indicators have the potential to complement lagging indicators in forest restoration by addressing near-term factors influencing progress and performance, such as land tenure security and quality seedling production. Using leading indicators can help identify issues early on, leading to more successful outcomes in the longer term.
1. Forest restoration targets are often planned, implemented, measured and reported based on few short-term lagging indicators (i.e. indicators of realised outcomes), such as the number of seedlings and area planted. 2. We propose the use of leading indicators, which denote likelihood of a certain outcome (e.g. odds that seedlings are of quality and properly planted) to complement lagging indicators and describe how this construct differs from the current practice and how they can be used in conjunction with available frameworks for forest restoration. 3. Leading indicators have great promise to complement lagging indicators because they address the near-term factors more likely to influence the progress and performance of restoration efforts. For example, secure land tenure (leading indicator) can increase the likelihood of long-term maintenance and protection (lagging indicator), and the use of best practices in quality seedling production (leading indicator) can increase survival rate (lagging indicator). 4. By observing near-term leading indicators, management can be adapted towards a goal. Long-term impacts cannot be verified in the early stages of forest restoration, hence claiming success within the length of project cycles is often unrealistic. Reporting on leading indicators can inform the likelihood that forest restoration goals will be achieved in the longer term. 5. Synthesis and applications. Leading indicators complement lagging indicators and can be used in forest restoration beyond monitoring and evaluation. Indicators can also be used in the design, adaptive management and reporting of restoration interventions. Leading indicators can be used to identify issues that might prevent success in a timely manner so they can be addressed.

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