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This book synthesizes knowledge from several fields that are crucial to sustainable rural development: the physical environment, biological and agricultural production, rural sociology and economics. It takes a systems perspective incorporating systems analysis, landscape analysis and soil, water, and land planning. Directed toward graduate students and professionals, it provides a source of information and concepts for those concerned with land and water policies and practice. It presents an integrated approach using practical and applicable models and methods and takes a middle position between an elementary conceptual approach to land and water management and a highly mathematically advanced treatise based exclusively on system modeling. The book is based on almost twenty years of experience in teaching a course on rural planning and the environment, the authors being specialists from universities, research institutions and companies in Europe and North America.
This book synthesizes knowledge from several fields that are
crucial to sustainable rural development: the physical environment,
biological and agricultural production, rural sociology and
economics. It takes a systems perspective incorporating systems
analysis, landscape analysis and soil, water, and land planning.
Directed toward graduate students and professionals, it provides a
source of information and concepts for those concerned with land
and water policies and practice. It presents an integrated approach
using practical and applicable models and methods and takes a
middle position between an elementary conceptual approach to land
and water management and a highly mathematically advanced treatise
based exclusively on system modeling. The book is based on almost
twenty years of experience in teaching a course on rural planning
and the environment, the authors being specialists from
universities, research institutions and companies in Europe and
North America.
This is the first introductory anthology on the philosophy of
ecology edited by an ecologist and a philosopher. It illustrates
the range of philosophical approaches available to ecologists and
provides a basis for understanding the thinking on which many of
today's environmental ideas are founded. Collectively, these
seminal readings make a powerful statement on the value of
ecological knowledge and thinking in alleviating the many problems
of modern industrial civilization.
Issues covered include: the challenges of defining scientific
ecology, tracing its genealogy, and distinguishing the science from
various forms of "ecological-like" thinking the ontology of
ecological entities and processes selected concepts of community,
stability, diversity, and niche the methodology of ecology
(rationalism and empiricism, reductionism and holism) the
significance of evolutionary law for ecological science
The ecosystem concept-the idea that flora and fauna interact with
the environment to form an ecological complex-has long been central
to the public perception of ecology and to increasing awareness of
environmental degradation. In this book an eminent ecologist
explains the ecosystem concept, tracing its evolution, describing
how numerous American and European researchers contributed to its
evolution, and discussing the explosive growth of ecosystem
studies. Golley surveys the development of the ecosystem concept in
the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and discusses the
coining of the term ecosystem by the English ecologist Sir Arthur
George Tansley in 1935. He then reviews how the American ecologist
Raymond Lindeman applied the concept to a small lake in Minnesota
and showed how the biota and the environment of the lake interacted
through the exchange of energy. Golley describes how a seminal
textbook on ecology written by Eugene P. Odum helped to popularize
the ecosystem concept and how numerous other scientists
investigated its principles and published their results. He relates
how ecosystem studies dominated ecology in the 1960s and became a
key element of the International Biological Program biome studies
in the United States-a program aimed at "the betterment of mankind"
specifically through conservation, human genetics, and improvements
in the use of natural resources; how a study of watershed
ecosystems in Hubbard Brook, New Hampshire, blazed new paths in
ecosystem research by defining the limits of the system in a
natural way; and how current research uses the ecosystem concept.
Throughout Golley shows how the ecosystem concept has been shaped
internationally by both developments in other disciplines and by
personalities and politics.
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