Ecosynthesis
Ecosynthesis is the use of introduced species to fill niches in a disrupted environment, with the aim of increasing the speed of ecological restoration. This decreases the amount of physical damage done in a disrupted landscape. An example is using willow in a stream corridor for sediment and phosphorus capture. It aims to aid ecological restoration, the practice of renewing and restoring degraded, damaged, or destroyed ecosystems and habitats in the environment by active human intervention and action. Humans use ecosynthesis to make environments more suitable for life, through restoration ecology
Restoration ecology
Ecological restoration aims to recreate, initiate, or accelerate the recovery of an ecosystem that has been disturbed.Revegetation: the establishment of vegetation on sites where it has been previously lost, often with erosion control as the primary goal.
Habitat enhancement: the process of increasing the suitability of a site as habitat for some desired species.
Remediation: improving an existing ecosystem or creating a new one with the aim of replacing another that has deteriorated or been destroyed.
Mitigation: legally mandated remediation for loss of protected species or an ecosystem.
Through restoration ecology, humans can help ecosystems that we have either caused harm to or disturbed be brought back to functional state.