Title: History of Ecology, the Environmental Movement and Agriculture
1History of Ecology, the Environmental Movement
and Agriculture
- Martha Rosemeyer
- IES
- January 6, 2003
2Outline
- I. History of Ecology (Martha)
- II. The Environmental Movement (Lin)
- III. The intersection of ecology, the
environmental movement and agriculture (Martha)
3Ecology is the science that underpins the
environmental movement, especially ecosystem
ecology
- Ecology is the study of the interactions between
living organisms and their environment - Ecosystem is a community of organisms (biotic
components) and their environment (abiotic
components) interacting as an ecological unit
4Ecosystems
- Dynamic systems through time with characteristic
patterns of - A. energy flow
- B. nutrient cycling
- C. succession
5(No Transcript)
6Food web concept important in bioaccumulation
- As one organism ingests another then the toxins
accumulate, particularly those that are fat
soluable
7Nutrient Cycles
Guo and Bradshaw 1993
8Sucession
Succession
9History of Ecology
- Herodotus 480 BC balance of
- nature concept
- Ernst Haeckel (1869) coined term ecology
- German biologist economy of nature
- Ellen Swallow (Richards) called the woman who
founded ecology (1892) - She used ecology to mean broad,
- interdisciplinary field. She particularly
focused - on industrial pollutants and air and water
quality
10F. (and E.) Clements 1900
- Vegetational communities as an
- organism that is born reaches climax
- state through succession
- Contested by other scientists whose data does not
support this, e.g. Cowles, Cooper - plants and animals do not act as one assemblage--
much variability in their range - Another idea that influenced agriculture weeds
are indicators of soil properties - Ideas are still around in various forms
- Gaia concept, Lovelock and Margulis
11Cowles
Tansley
- Tansley (British) 1935 concept
- of the ecosystem
- The elegance of theTansleys idea of the
ecosystem is that it is comprehensive, including
within itself all those elements physical,
chemical and biological, which could conceivably
affect the organisms being studied. (Evans 1976) - Note that still focussed on the organism
- However, the ecosystem idea was also shared by a
number of other scientists
Photo Chicago Daily News
12Eugene Odum, Introduction to Ecology text 1953
- Defined ecology as the structure
- and function of ecosystems
- Influenced by others developing ideas of energy
flow and nutrient cycles, which he systematized
and explained well - Heavily influenced by brother, Howard, an
Electrical Engineer
13Drawings of energy flow diagrams used electrical
engineering symbols
Guo and Bradshaw 1993
14History of nutrient cycling
- von Leibig, German chemist 1840
- plants assimilate nutrients from soil
- basic nutrient cycles, e.g. nitrogen
15- Sukachev 1945 (Russian)
- biogeocoenosis biogeochemical cycling
- One of the teachings of dialectical materialism
is that in nature all phenomena and objects are
interrelated. - It is a major task of natural science to deepen
its knowledge of existing relationships to
discover the underlying patterns with a view to
controlling them on behalf of man. Sukachev
1960
16II. Environmental movement
- Where did the environmental movement begin?
- time
- site specificity or name specificity
17III. The intersection of ecology, the
environmental movement and agriculture
- Agriculture starts about 12,000 years ago-
traditional systems - ...
- US until 1940-50 most holding small, ie what a
family could farm - some mechanization
- inputs, like fertilizer, low
- hybrid corn 1930s
18Green revolution 1950, post WW II,
conventional ag
- Appeared to be imminent famine in China and India
- Green Revolution means
- Adoption of high yielding varieties, dependent
upon irrigation, fertilizers and pesticides
19- Wartime capability turned to produce peacetime
inputs for war on famine - pesticides (defined as a substance which kills
weeds, insects or bacteria, fungi
(disease-causing organisms) - Successful in terms of absolute increase in food
production - 1960s and 1970s, social impact of green
revolution was reported - in Punjab, India, small farmers loose their land,
credit becomes an issue
201960-1970s Rachel Carson publishes Silent Spring
1962
- Environmental impacts of agriculture come forward
- Environmentalists view agriculture bad because
it is humanly managed vs. the pristine natural
world - Environmental groups dont actively support
organic agriculture
211980s Rise of agroecology as a response to
conventional ag interdisciplinary field- five
majorcontributors
- Ecology
- Environmentalism
- Agriculture
- Indigenous agriculture, especially traditional
tropical systems - Social sciences
22Agroecology
- AE is the study of the interactions between
living organisms and their environment in
agricultural systems - takes a systems approach
- Latin America contributed ideas ahead of US
- Altieri, Gliessman, Vandermeer, Carroll
- Varying social emphasis, e.g. in Latin America
the social aspects are much more emphasized vs.
in US where agroecology is heavily weighted
toward the ecological
23Hot topics in agroecology
- Pesticides and bioaccumulation
- Pesticide effects on biodiversity
- Mixtures of pesticides and effects on organisms
- Endocrine disrupting effects of pesticides and
industrial chemicals - Genetic engineering and genetic pollution in
environment
Diverse Peruvian potatoes
24Hot topics in agroecology, cont.
- Soil food web- function of diversity
- Predator/prey interactions and biocontrol
- Nutrient cycles
- Industrial waste--toxic waste and application to
land of heavy metals and dioxin in fertilizers
25Environmental groups now are embracing
sustainable agriculture
- Greenpeace- anti-genetic engineering campaign
- Sierra Club/Friends of the Earth run articles on
sustainable agriculture often - Redefining Progress hosts sustainable agriculture
conference
26Major underlying philosophical themes in
agroecology and the environmental movement
- Are humans separate from or part of nature?
- Are their aspects of nature that act as a
supra-organism? - Is a reductionist or holistic approach more
useful and accurate, or do they each give
different information?