Ecology and Ecosystem Conservation
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The book begins by exploring the need for ecological science in understanding current environmental issues and briefly discussing what ecology is and isn’t. Subsequent chapters address critical issues in conservation and show how ecological science can be applied to them. The book explores questions such as:
• What is the role of ecological science in decision making?
• What factors govern the assembly of ecosystems and determine their response to various stressors?
• How does Earth’s climate system function and determine the distribution of life on Earth?
• What factors control the size of populations?
• How does fragmentation of the landscape affect the persistence of species on the landscape?
• How does biological diversity influence ecosystem processes?
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Ecology and Ecosystem Conservation - Oswald J. Schmitz
Directors
Preface
In writing this book I have taken much inspiration from the writings of ecologist and conservation ethicist Aldo Leopold, who opened his own book—A Sand County Almanac—with the declaration There are some who can live without wild things, and some who cannot.These [writings] are the delights and dilemmas of one who cannot.
These words have resonated with me ever since I was first introduced to Leopold’s ideas as an undergraduate. Like Leopold, I have a lifelong professional and personal passion to live in, understand, and write about the workings and wonders of the natural world. As an ecologist, I do this for the pure joy of testing out ideas through scientific discovery and reporting on my findings. As an ecologist, I also do this to contribute to a scholarly community whose goal is to build a body of knowledge that can help society make informed decisions about its interactions with the environment.
The prescience that Leopold demonstrated in his writings is remarkable. His Land Ethic
sketches out many of the modern themes that ecologists address in their research and in their efforts to inform society about ways to reconcile economic development with ecosystem conservation. These include the evolution of species interactions in food webs and the consequences of disrupting this evolutionary process, the interconnectedness of ecosystems in time and space through material flows and species movement, and the services that ecosystems provide to humankind. In the intervening fifty-odd years since A Sand County Almanac’s publication, the ecological science community has done much to fill in details large and small and thereby provide vibrant color to Leopold’s sketches.
I wrote this book to convey these exciting scientific insights to a readership—including undergraduate environmental studies majors and environmental conservation professionals—that is not intimately familiar with ecology as a scientific discipline. My hope is that readers will come to appreciate the intricate ways that humans are connected to their environment and how their interactions can alter the sustainability of the very ecosystems of which they are a part and from which they derive vital services.
I do not consider myself to be an environmentalist, which I define as someone who advocates particular ways of solving problems. As a scientist who studies the workings of ecological systems, I feel it is my duty to present the science as clearly and as objectively as possible, and in ways that illuminate the consequences of different actions so that each reader can make informed decisions about how he or she chooses to interact with the environment. Most importantly, I hope to provide readers the very humbling understanding that the consequences of our decisions today will be felt by our grandchildren and great-grandchildren. These are the timescales—at the least—on which ecosystem functions operate and on which we need to anticipate our impacts.
Several colleagues have provided thoughtful comments and discussion on various drafts, including: Brandon Barton, Holly Jones, Gus Speth, Karen Stamieszkin, and Mark Urban. I very much appreciate the time and effort they put into reviewing. I also thank Leslea Schmitz for her patience during the entire project and for holding the fort
while I was absorbed in writing.
—Oswald J. Schmitz
Yale University
New Haven, Connecticut
1
Ecosystem Conservation: The Need for Ecological Science
IT IS BECOMING INCREASINGLY IMPOSSIBLE TO TALK ABOUT HUMANS’ RELATIONSHIP to nature without mentioning ecology. More and more, this particular field of science is being called upon to play a leading role in illuminating and solving environmental problems. So much so that the environmental historian Donald Worster suggests that the twenty-first century might well be called the Age of Ecology
(Worster 1994).
In the post–World War II era, ecological science has played a prominent role in identifying the cause of major environmental problems and motivating consequent policy to mitigate them. Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring (1961) alerted us to the danger to humans and wildlife species of pesticides, which led to government regulation of chemicals in the environment. The investment of resources and brainpower to discover that phosphate pollution from households caused massive algae blooms that choke out other forms of life in major freshwater bodies (Schindler 1974) was nothing short of an ecological Manhattan project that led to the Clean Water Act. At the same time, the prospect that acid precipitation (Likens and Borman 1974), produced when sulphur and nitrous oxides from industrial and automobile emissions react and mix with atmospheric oxygen and hydrogen and rain back down, could corrode major terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems spurred tougher sulfate and nitrous emissions standards.
Ecological science successfully led to policy solutions to these problems because ecologists could easily trace the causal chain of effects: the problems could be seen and smelled and their sources easily identified
(Speth 2004).The problems also were localized and they resonated with society because they directly jeopardized local livelihoods and well-being.
Solving other contemporary environmental problems, such as habitat fragmentation and attendant species extinctions (Simberloff and Abele 1976), has been a less successful enterprise. In this case, the solution to the problem—halting land development and massive scale resource extraction—is usually perceived as standing in the way of human enterprise and economic well being. Moreover, those most directly affected by such activity often are non-human species. And, in many cases, the direct consequences of the actions (e.g., tropical forest loss) occur in distant lands under different government regimes. In this case, the problems were out of [immediate] sight
and so could be relegated out of mind.
The irony in such reasoning is that we take great pains to understand how one kind of economy—the market economy—functions; and we take great pains to protect the integrity and functioning of the capital markets that drive economic progress. Society spends comparatively much less time thinking about, understanding, and protecting another major economy—the natural economy—resulting from ecosystem functions and services. Like market economies, myriad lines of dependency exist between species of producers and consumers within natural economies. Humans are not exempted from these dependencies. Any collapse in ecosystem functions, including collapse due to deforestation and fragmentation, stands to reverberate through the market economy, in turn, affecting human well being.Therefore,slogans such as jobs versus the environment
that pit putative economic progress against measures to conserve ecosystem functions may be misguided. Ecosystems ultimately undergird and drive our economic stability.
Any collapse in ecosystem func-
tions, including collapse due to
deforestation and fragmentation,
stands to reverberate through the
market economy, in turn, affecting
human well being. Therefore,
slogans such as "jobs versus the
environment" that pit putative eco-
nomic progress against measures
to conserve ecosystem functions
may be misguided. Ecosystems
ultimately undergird and drive our
economic stability.
The aim of this book is to offer insight into the link between the diversity of life—biodiversity—and the structure and functioning of ecosystems. As with the problems of the mid 1900s, the role of ecological science is central to identifying and illuminating the intricate ways that nature works. However, unlike in the past, the challenge for ecological science in discerning the causal chain of effects is becoming more difficult. But the challenge is surmountable. Meeting the challenge requires a new way of thinking about the intricate dependencies between humans and nature in society’s endeavor to sustain long-term health and well being.
Human impacts are many, they are global in reach, and they often combine in synergistic or antagonistic ways at many different geographic scales. Thus, the effect of any single impact is often insidious and therefore requires decades to centuries before it becomes fully manifest. It becomes difficult to pinpoint a specific culprit for such ails as rising cancer levels, degradation of water quality, species’ limb deformities, endocrine dysfunction, and many others. Answers require in-depth and critical understanding of the complex ways that species and impacts are linked.
Resolving this complexity is what makes ecological science exciting. At the same time, this complexity is what makes environmental problems ecologically wicked problems
to solve (Ludwig et al. 2001). Murkiness about causality makes it very easy for governments to dismiss a putative cause of any one impact and therefore avoid action to solve the problem. But, is dismissing an environmental problem for lack of clear causal understanding a wise decision? Such a question cannot be answered without first having a clear understanding of the way that impacts propagate along the myriad lines of dependency within ecosystems.
This book aims to offer such understanding by conveying ecological principles that are relevant to the grand scientific questions about sustaining ecosystem functions. In identifying those questions I take some guidance from a forward-looking report produced in the early 1990s on behalf on the Ecological Society of America titled The Sustainable Biosphere Initiative
(Lubchenco et al. 1991). This report first underscored the point that most of the environmental problems that human society faces are fundamentally ecological in nature.
In anticipation of the increasing need for ecologists to play a leading intellectual role in solving environmental problems, the authors—leading senior ecologists—developed a plan of action to assemble critical scientific knowledge required to conserve and to wisely manage global ecosystems in the twenty-first century. This report recognized that citizens, policy makers, resource managers, and leaders of business and industry routinely must make decisions concerning the exploitation of resources, but that these decisions cannot be made effectively with limited understanding of the interplay between human domination of ecosystems and impacts on ecosystem function.
The effect of any single environ-
mental impact is often insidious
and therefore requires decades to
centuries before it becomes fully
manifest. It becomes difficult to pin-
point a specific culprit for such ails
as rising cancer levels, degradation
of water quality, species’ limb de-
formities, endocrine dysfunction,
and many others. Answers require
in-depth and critical understanding
of the complex ways that species
and impacts are linked.
According to the report, effective environmental decision-making requires better scientific understanding on three major issues at the nexus between human society and their exploitation of ecosystems:
Global Change, which includes the ecological consequences of natural and human-caused changes in climate, soil properties, water quality, and land- and water-use patterns.
Biological Diversity, which includes the natural basis for the distribution and abundance of species and habitats, human-caused alterations to those patterns locally as well as globally, and the link between diversity and the sustainable functioning of ecosystems.
Sustainable Ecological Systems, which includes the response of ecological systems to exploitation and disturbances, the restoration of ecosystems, the sustainable management of ecological systems, and the interface between ecological processes and human social systems.
I deal with each of those issues consistently throughout the book. But each issue can grade into the other. For example, global change through conversion of forest land into agriculture can impact the distribution and abundance of species—biodiversity. Thus, rather than treat each issue separately, they are interwoven throughout book. The Sustainable Biosphere Initiative report also points out that in order to make effective choices and decisions about the environment in light of these issues we need to answer several big questions about ecology and ecological systems. These questions are:
What is the role of ecological science in decision-making?
What factors govern the assembly of ecosystems and determine their response to various stressors?
How does the earth’s climate system function and determine the distribution of life on Earth?
What factors control the size of populations?
What are the population level consequences of species’ life-history adaptations?
How does fragmentation of the landscape affect the persistence of species on the landscape?
How does biological diversity influence ecosystem process?
What ecological principles need to be considered in the design of strategies to protect biological diversity?
My aim here is to address these big research questions by structuring the narrative around example environmental problems. At the same time I will show how the questions posed in the Sustainable Biosphere Initiative document have lead to fresh ways of thinking about ecosystems that are directly relevant to solving problems, including the link between biodiversity and ecosystem functioning, valuing ecosystem services, interconnections of ecosystems across geographic scales, and emergence of ecosystem properties consequent to species sorting processes on landscapes.
I deal with each of the questions in individual chapters. The chapters highlight the latest concepts aimed at answering the big research questions. The book then closes with a final chapter that addresses the need, not only to understand ecological science, but to put that science into an ecosystem ethics perspective. It also returns to and answers the question: Is it wise for policy makers to dismiss environmental problems when their cause is uncertain?
In answering this question, I recognize that society must reconcile significant trade-offs between human health and economic welfare and the protection of natural ecosystem function. One role of ecological science, as I see it, is not to judge, but rather to illuminate the ecological consequences of different potential choices that might be made. Another role, which I also try to convey, is to engender new thinking and awareness of the looming spatial and temporal scales of our impact on nature as globalization of market economies increases the human footprint on the environment.
2
The Science of Ecology
ASK SOMEONE TO DESCRIBE AN ECOLOGICAL SYSTEM AND YOU MIGHT GET the response that it is a group of organisms living together in a fixed place. This is a view likely derived from the familiar elementary school science experiment in which soil, water, nutrients such as nitrogen, bacteria, worms, some plants, and perhaps some herbivores such as snails or insects are put into a hermetically sealed glass container, placed in sunlight, and then left to their own devices. Observers of this experiment always marvel that this simple ecosystem is able to maintain itself indefinitely without any kind of nutrient or species input from the outside. This is because the experiment does not merely assemble a haphazard collection of species. Rather, the experiment deliberately assembles species that together create a natural economy involving a chain of production and consumption, albeit of food energy and nutrients, but an economy nonetheless. In this economy, plants draw up water and nutrients from the soil and carbon dioxide from the air and are stimulated by sunlight to convert those different chemicals into tissue; herbivores eat that plant tissue and when old individuals die the chemical constituents of their body are broken down by worms and bacteria and are recycled back through the system. This economy functions whenever the important lines of dependency, that is the linkage between consumers and their resources and the recycling feedbacks, are