This category addresses regenerative land management as a systems-based approach to restoring ecological function. It explores how land, water, soil, and vegetation interact, and how management decisions influence those relationships over time.
In Central Texas, land regeneration is shaped by unique challenges, including historical overuse, altered hydrology, and climatic variability. Regenerative approaches seek to work with ecological processes rather than against them, emphasizing resilience, adaptability, and long-term function.
Articles in this section examine regenerative principles, regional context, and conceptual frameworks that inform how regeneration is understood and applied. Content often overlaps with soil, water, and management topics, but remains focused on the broader systems perspective that connects them.