Despite their often dangerous and unpredictable nature, landslides
provide fascinating templates for studying how soil organisms, plants
and animals respond to such destruction. The emerging field of landslide
ecology helps us understand these responses, aiding slope stabilisation
and restoration and contributing to the progress made in geological
approaches to landslide prediction and mitigation. Summarising the
growing body of literature on the ecological consequences of landslides,
this book provides a framework for the promotion of ecological tools in
predicting, stabilising, and restoring biodiversity to landslide scars
at both local and landscape scales. It explores nutrient cycling; soil
development; and how soil organisms disperse, colonise and interact in
what is often an inhospitable environment. Recognising the role that
these processes play in providing solutions to the problem of unstable
slopes, the authors present ecological approaches as useful, economical
and resilient supplements to landslide management.