TERRANOVA made progress beyond the state of the art by:
- consistently integrating concepts and tools of different disciplines and research to address sustainability challenges related to land use and landscape management.
- analyzing various types of data, including ecological, archaeological, economic, and geographic data to identify transitions in energy regimes.
- assessing an intelligent variety in landscape scenarios with alternative trajectories resulting in sustainable land-use policies, including scenarios for (abandoned) agricultural land.
- identifying and analyzing the ecological, economical and societal potential of rewilding in Europe and displacement to allow for a more holistic understanding of the impact for the low carbon society.
- producing two white papers, organising two public events (one in person, one digital) and organising a successful 1st stakeholder meeting demonstrating that science is not (only) for scientists, but aims at helping land managers in their practices to reach the United Nations Sustainable Development
Goals.
The final results of the project are:
- 14 Individual Ph.D. theses published, submitted and in manuscript.
- N papers published and submitted, n papers in manuscript and 3 white papers
- Developed a reconstructed deep historical past of humans, plants, animals, and climate identifying energy regimes and transitions.
- Published a digital atlas of landscape histories related to people, climate, plants and animals through time and their use of energy.
- Published a Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) titled "Integrated Landscape Analysis: Addressing Biodiversity and Climate Crises.
- Developed a new approach, tools, and protocols of landscape management in Europe, developed with local to international stakeholders, to be specified in grounding rewilding ecosystems to define conservation management priorities and determining solutions for abandoned (agricultural) land
including trade-offs between culture and nature in landscape development.