NATURES PULSING PARADIGM

被引:228
作者
ODUM, WE
ODUM, EP
ODUM, HT
机构
[1] UNIV VIRGINIA,DEPT ENVIRONM SCI,CHARLOTTESVILLE,VA 22903
[2] UNIV GEORGIA,INST ECOL,ATHENS,GA 30601
[3] UNIV FLORIDA,GAINESVILLE,FL 32601
来源
ESTUARIES | 1995年 / 18卷 / 04期
关键词
D O I
10.2307/1352375
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
While the steady stare is often seen as the final result of development in nature, a more realistic concept may be that nature pulses regularly to make a pulsing steady state-a new paradigm gaining acceptance in ecology and many other fields. In this paper we compare tidal salt marshes, tidal freshwater marshes, and seasonally flooded freshwater wetlands as examples of pulsed ecosystems. Despite marked differences in species composition, biodiversity, and community structure, these wetland types are functionally similar because of the common denominator of water flow pulses. Often a period of high production alternates with a period of rapid consumption in these fluctuating water-level systems, a biotic pulsing to which many life histories, such as that of the wood stork, are adapted. Pulsing of medium frequency and amplitude often provides an energy subsidy for the community thus enhancing its productivity. The energy of large-scale pulses such as storms are usually dissipated in natural ecosystems with little harm to the biotic network; however, when seawalls, dikes, or stabilized sand dunes are constructed to confront these strong pulses, the whole ecosystem (and associated human structures) may be severly damaged when the barriers fail because too much of the storm energy is concentrated on them. The relationship between biologically mediated internal pulsing, such as plant-herbivore or predator-prey cycles, and physical external pulsing is discussed not only in wetlands but in other ecosystem types as well. An intriguing hypothesis is that ecosystem performance and species survival are enhanced when external and internal pulses are coupled. We suggest that if pulsing is general, then what is sustainable in ecosystems, is a repeating oscillation that is often poised on the edge of chaos.
引用
收藏
页码:547 / 555
页数:9
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