The problem with ecosystem interactions
Here’s a phrase that’s lately been haunting me: “the
extinction of ecosystem interactions.” I first encountered it in science writer
Connie Barlow’s fascinating book, The Ghosts of Evolution, which is about the
plants, mainly trees, that have lingered into modern times even though the megafauna with which they were co-evolved, that ate their fruits
and dispersed their seeds, have gone extinct. Of the several reasons the
animals disappeared, a major one has everything to do with our species’
penchant for using a resource until there is nothing left. Thus, when you look
at, say, an Osage orange tree, with its large, inedible, multi-seeded fruits,
or savor the delicious flesh of an avocado (while not eating the insanely
large, poisonous seed contained within), you are summoning the ghosts of the
elephant-like gomphotheres and others that once roamed the Americas.
This is an excellent example of the extinction of ecosystem
interactions. Once the animals disappeared, so too did the relationships and
their attending interactions, leaving the plants hard put to survive into the
present day. How and why they did so is a long, convoluted story best told by
Barlow. The phrase itself comes from a short article, published in 1977 by pioneering
ecologist Dan Janzen, called “The Deflowering of Central America,” in which he traces
the relationship of a particular bee species with a certain species of flowering
plant, and describes what happens when that relationship is interrupted by over-disturbance
of the human kind.
When we think about species extinction, we often think about
individual, usually charismatic species such as honeybees, monarch butterflies,
eagles, wolves or polar bears, or plants such as giant sequoias. However, individual
species of plants and animals do not exist in a vacuum. They live as
participants in a four-dimensional structure of relationships, dependencies,
limiting factors, physical environment, weather, and multiple stocks and flows
that includes all the other living beings who also exist in this same web. For
example, plants have flowers so they’ll attract pollinators, who forage among
the flowers for food in order to raise their young so that the whole cycle can
perpetuate itself. And some pollinators such as monarch butterflies are so
exquisitely adapted that their young can only grow and thrive on the pollen and
nectar of certain plants. Plants also produce fruits and seeds, and, if not
wind-dispersed, rely on animals to eat the fruits and disperse the seeds,
though the animals, of course, are looking for tasty food. Then there are the
soil critters with whom the plants interact (the biological system of the
soil), and the predators that hunt the herbivores, and on and on in the dizzying
complex web of interactions that makes a healthy, dynamically balanced
ecosystem.
It is this web of interactions that can get thrown seriously
out of whack through destructive human disturbance, which, as we can’t avoid
knowing, is happening on a planetary scale. Human overpopulation is a major factor. Urban
overdevelopment on the one hand, and, on the other, desertification caused by
overgrazing and unsustainable farming practices that include overuse of
groundwater are perfect instances of what I’m talking about. So is clear cutting forest, and in a very
extreme example, the nearly complete replacement of thriving, complex ecosystems
such as the oak savannas and prairies of the Midwest or parts of the tropical
rainforests of Brazil with industrial corn and soy production. In these latter
cases, the destruction of interactions extends as far as killing off a thriving
soil biome and polluting streams and rivers.
Even in less extreme cases such as when land is cleared for
a school, shopping mall or housing development, the native plants get cleared
away, native bees and other insect pollinators, predators and herbivores subsequently
decline through lack of food and habitat to enable good reproduction, which
leads to further plant declines for lack of pollination. When the insects and
the seeds and berries produced by native plants decline, so do the songbirds that
depend on them, as do the raptors that hunt the songbirds. The same pattern goes for all the other life
of the ecosystem: mammals large and small, amphibians and other reptiles, and
the myriad life of the soil. When birds and other dispersers decline, plants further
decline, and so on in a downward spiral of impoverishment until--in my part of
the world-- the prairie, savanna or woodland becomes a shadow of its former
self. If enough of these interactions go extinct, the ecosystem, which by
definition is a complex adaptive system, will, owing to positive feedback
loops, slide into a less complex state, with a cascade of negative effects for
all other species in the system, including further extinction of species. The
word for these kinds of sad landscapes is depauperate: they are poor,
impoverished and devoid of the richness and biodiversity that should be there
by rights.
All of this is a long-winded way of getting around to what I
want to discuss, which is the importance of the protection and restoration of
ecosystem interactions in human dominated landscapes and how reconciliation
ecology can help us do so. The question is not just how we can save any
particular good-looking species such as monarchs. Beyond that lies the bigger
question: What can we can do to encourage complex ecological interactions, and
do it on a large enough scale, quickly enough, thus saving monarchs, and all
kinds of other species (some of which we haven’t even discovered yet), as well?
This is an altogether more interesting, difficult question.
It is also more fraught: with danger, difficulty, and potential failure. Yet
only by attempting to answer and act on this question in a given place—and
indeed the answer is worked out through the action—can we, ourselves, find a
home within nature, and help ensure that all kinds of ecosystems—and ultimately
the planet—will be not only a suitable habitat for these others, but also for
us. The question is fundamentally practical because answering it could go a
long way towards helping solve many global environmental problems such as
climate change and the need for carbon sequestration. Yet it is deeply ethical and spiritual as
well. Discovering answers and appropriate actions requires a shift in thinking,
a redefinition of humanity’s proper role vis a vis the biosphere as well as a
shift in ethics, religious doctrine and spiritual practice. In the long run, the
complex definition of what it means to be human may shift and change, as well.
What is reconciliation ecology and how can it help?
As formulated by Michael J. Rosenzweig in 2003, reconciliation
ecology is “the science of inventing, establishing
and maintaining new habitats to conserve species diversity in places where
people live, work and play." Implied is an ethos demonstrated
through action that has the potential to help us move beyond our current, cruel
dilemma of how to live on the earth without wrecking it. Like ecological
restoration does at the landscape level, it does not focus specifically on
saving one or another particular species. When most effective, reconciliation
ecology helps a given piece of land recover the myriad functions and
interactions that enable it and all its denizens to thrive, yet does not post
“keep out” signs for humans. Importantly, unlike conservation or preservation,
which focus on reserving landscapes specifically for non-human species,
reconciliation ecology also encompasses the work of reconfiguring overly
human-dominated landscapes to make room for other species. It enables humans to
take our rightful place as caretakers, rather than destroyers, of the earth.
The thing about natural systems is that they need a lot of
space. In ecology, the species-area curve suggests that the larger the area,
the more biodiversity can be supported. Thus, in general, islands have less
biodiversity than continents. By extension, in a fragmented landscape of nature
reserves surrounded by human development the reserves function like islands. Species
go extinct and ecosystem interactions wink out when there is not enough habitat
and contiguous landmass to sustain enough different species of plants and animals
so they’re able to reproduce well enough to keep populations at a healthy size.
While nature reserves are of the utmost importance, no matter how we increase
their size and extent, they are not by themselves enough to provide for real
habitat needs, even if connected by corridors. We can see this clearly in the
case of bee and butterfly declines in the US. Yes, pesticides and disease take
a deadly toll; but it is also simple lack of habitat—of large areas with huge
numbers of diverse flowers that allow for healthy ecosystem interactions—that
is a major factor in the struggles pollinators face in maintaining viable
populations.
E.O. Wilson has recently proposed that we should give over
to nature half of the earth by creating vast reserves on land and sea. This
statement could bring to mind the old human culture/nature dichotomy so
prominent in Western thought, including the either/or binary thinking and
non-holistic problem solving that has so often and still continues to result in incomplete solutions that in turn generate further problems. This type of thinking gave
us the now generally discredited idea that there is a bright line of
demarcation (perhaps symbolized by a fence) separating humans and human culture
from the rest of earth’s species. One might fearfully imagine the human
population huddled in crowded cities, sequestered from vast areas where we are
not allowed. This is clearly not Wilson’s intent, however. One of his models is
places such as Area de Conservación Guanacaste (
ACG) in northwestern Costa Rica, where Dan
Janzen and his wife Winnie Hallwachs have, with local people, developed a model
of conservation and restoration that includes livelihoods for residents.
One way I like to think of sharing the earth is to picture a
continuum, with outright wilderness on one end and completely human-dominated
areas, e.g. over-developed urban centers or industrial zones such as the tar
sands mining areas on the other. These are extremes. It is desirable—and
necessary—to greatly enlarge protected wilderness zones and to restore as many
natural areas as possible, while sharply decreasing the size and impact of
anthropogenic sites— and completely eliminating the most egregious. But
in-between there is a huge amount of territory that is and will remain mostly
human-impacted but livable. Here lie plenty of opportunities for reconciliation ecology at
every scale.
Living the good life in the middle landscape
In the US, at least, much of our landscape is what could be
considered what literary critic Leo Marx described as a “middle landscape” that
blends human culture and nature—admittedly, often disastrously at the moment,
but where we also have the most obvious chance to do better. This middle
landscape, as discussed by Marx and others subsequently, encompasses towns,
suburbs, farms and even nature preserves in a human-managed patchwork. This is
the type of landscape within which Thoreau resided and wrote so productively
about nature, as did both Aldo Leopold, when he moved back to the Midwest after
years out west in wilderness areas and May Watts, who lived in Chicago and
whose writings celebrated and defended close-by natural areas. It is where my
colleagues and I do our own ecological restoration and management work in
Chicago-area forest preserves and where I do my native plant gardening at in my
backyard. Most Americans may never hike in
the Rockies or, conversely, visit the tar sands desolation. But most of us do
reside in some version of the middle landscape. Here is where most ecological
restoration via the practice of reconciliation ecology must and can be done—at
home.
I like to think of reconciliation ecology as the umbrella
term for all the ways that people are learning to live and work while making
room for nature and biodiversity. The list is long and encompasses multiple,
overlapping disciplines: ecological restoration and rehabilitation, carbon farming
and ranching, organic farming, agroecology, agroforestry and permaculture,
among others that involve working on the land hewing closely to natural
processes and cycles, while looking to increase biodiversity. Urban planners, architects, landscape
architects and designers who are incorporating green infrastructure, green
corridors and other resilient features into their designs must also be included,
as well as native plant and bird gardeners, regenerative gardeners and myriad others.
It all adds up. The fact that my next-door neighbor and I
garden with native plants in our backyards might not be enough to help increase
ecosystem interactions in our town. But the fact that over the last five to ten
years hundreds of people in the same town have begun to engage in some form of
native plant gardening, along with local schools and parks, means that for many
species of animals, especially birds and insects, there is increased habitat
richness and abundance, leading to the chance for increased complexity of ecological
interactions and hence, a stronger ecosystem. Meanwhile, backyard carbon
sequestration is going on, the air is a little less polluted, the soil is
healthier, and rainwater more easily absorbed. And, these gardens form a link
or corridor with the forest preserves, helping to expand habitat a little
further—important not only for resident birds but for all the migrating
warblers and other birds that pass through spring and fall. In this way, we
local gardeners are contributing to improved ecosystem interactions at a
continental, even a hemispheric level.
The kind of earth-centered ethos and practice I am talking
about recognizes that, while human beliefs and actions help “bring the world
into being,” a foundational teaching in some indigenous belief and ceremonial
systems, our species is, as is becoming increasingly clear, not the boss of
nature, even though we bear responsibility as caretakers. Nature gives us great
gifts: life itself, for example, and the wherewithal to create societies and
enduring civilizations. We might ask ourselves what we owe in return, and how
we can reestablish a relationship of reciprocity. We indeed are not “as gods so
we might as well get good at it,” as the Whole Earth Catalog famously
proclaimed in 1968 and some neo-environmentalists seem lately to have taken for
a motto, particularly those in favor of techno-fixes for ecological problems.
This is not at all to dismiss science or technology; I
thoroughly understand the roles both will have to play as we work to help
ecosystems recover their natural functioning. But, as Quaker economist Kenneth
Boulding pointed out, also in the 1960’s, we must mature past “cowboy” ideas
about living on earth. Hard limits mean we do not actually have the freedom to
do whatever we want, wherever we want, whenever we want, with no planetary
consequences. Many people are still resisting if not outright denying this
truth. However, ever-increasing numbers of people have embraced an idea of
reciprocity, even if not fully articulated, from those risking their lives in
environmental struggles in Honduras to affluent Midwest suburbanites who have
stopped using pesticides, let their lawns get a little less “pristine,” and begun
to plant milkweeds for the monarchs.
They all have recognized in some way and have expressed
through their actions that it is time, past time, to once again take up our
sacred role and responsibility of tending to the earth, whoever and wherever we
are. This goes double for those of us who are not of indigenous cultures. In
this light, reconciliation ecology might be seen as a religious project, for,
as Chicago-based William Jordon (who coined the term “restoration ecology” in
the 1980’s) writes, “religion is the art and discipline of dealing with the
problems of relationship at the psychological and spiritual levels.” I recognize
that some of those most committed to ecological restoration and reconciliation
ecology would be the last people to speak in overtly spiritual, much less
religious terms. Yet there it is. If we work faithfully and patiently to aid
wild nature, we just might avoid mass extinction while helping mitigate climate
change and making up for grievous mistakes we have made and continue to make.
I
am not advocating a return to a hunter-gathering way of life, or, again, getting rid of
science, nor the scientific method; nor am I advocating romantic pie-in-the-sky
solutions that ignore the very real, implacable natural processes that can be
so destructive to human kind. Nature is not our cuddly Disney friend, and much
restoration work is hard, dirty and can involve sheer drudgery; I say this from
experience. But I do believe that unless the spiritual, ethical and moral
elements are reincorporated into our relations with nature, we will not get
very far in our efforts against climate change, pollution or any other
environmental problems we face.
Can reconciliation ecology, along with conservation and ecological
restoration, return continental ecosystems to how they were before European
settlement (in the US), a rule of thumb standard for many in the ecological
restoration community? No, not likely. For one thing, time and change only move
forward. As Heraclitus pointed out, a person cannot ever step twice into the
same river because the water flows and the person changes. So it is with landscapes: they can only ever evolve
into something new. Physical conditions change, the people and other species
inhabiting them are different, human culture is different and myriad new (and some
destructively invasive) species have made their homes across the country. We
must beware the false dream that there is some past, edenic golden age to which
we might return, if only such and such conditions were met. (Also, as a
reminder, in many places, pre-European landscapes were not unpeopled
wilderness. The land was managed in ways to increase overall productivity;
management was part of and requisite to material culture and spiritual belief
systems.)
Physical conditions in the past were not those of today, and
true to the nature of history, we can’t ever fully know what they were. Even if
we had access to a wayback machine, the complexity would be too great for us to
recreate. Even in the present we can’t know all the interactions in a given
ecosystem, or for that matter, whether we are truly restoring or instead helping
create something new. As Jordan has written, there are always “Humpty
Dumpties,” or ecosystem features that may have contributed to the structure and
ecological functioning of a given place that cannot ever happen again,
preventing the landscape we are restoring from exactly entering its historical
arc. The mere fact of taking on such a project in the present by modern people
would guarantee that such a recreation would be inexact. However, though we
can’t know all the interactions we are trying to restore, it is still possible
to get things going again and build up to some kind of critical mass so that
the web of relationships begins to recomplexify on its own.
The upshot is that if we carry on restoration and management
projects, large and small, and make plenty of room for wild nature, as E.O.
Wilson suggests, there is hope that continental ecosystems can recover into a
new state of health. But much would have to change.
Where are we going? How will we get there?
Based on the evidence of climate change, resource depletion
and species extinction, it is clear that many of our currently accepted,
conventional ways of life and means of solving problems based on the model of
“progress” aren’t good enough anymore because they fail to take the biosphere enough
into account. To truly “return,” or recreate something even approximating pre-European
conditions, in which there could be expansive enough habitat to maintain good
enough biodiversity so as to least slow species extinction to normal ranges, while
also increasing resilience and helping to sequester carbon and slow climate
change, the US population would have to stabilize and ultimately shrink. In the
meantime our society would have to evolve, hopefully by choice, but also
perforce, into something so radically different from its present state as possibly
to become nearly unrecognizable to many people alive today. Yet this new,
biocentric or ecocentric civilization and resulting land use might also be
unrecognizable to historic native peoples, though based on similar cultural deep
structures of relationship with the natural world as those societies had and
their descendants continue to have.
In such a society many of our accepted conventions would be
turned on their heads and categories that are clear-cut to us would become
permeable and would blur and change. I find it easy to imagine the landscapes,
and harder to imagine the embedded society. Cities might become biodiversity
hubs interlaced with green infrastructure, farms and wide green corridors that
would connect large natural areas outside their limits, while in the meantime
farms and ranches might not be easily to distinguish from the surrounding
“wild” countryside. Large parts of the country would be off-limits to
development and would be places dangerous for the unwary owing to a
proliferation not only of herds of herbivores, but of the large carnivores on
which ecosystems depend for their health. There might be fewer roads, and those
that remained would have wide overpasses designed for free wildlife movement. There
might be new religions, and traditional ones might become more ecocentric. Perhaps
the old versions that focus on reaching for the sky at the expense of life on
earth would come to be considered immature. The nature of work might change in
unforeseen ways. Children would be trained in systems thinking and would grow
up with a working knowledge of ecology in general and ecosystem knowledge
specific to their place. Materialism might decline. With restrictions on
resource use across the board, and particularly fossil fuels, material wealth
would certainly decline, and life would be less “convenient” and harder,
possibly much harder, measured by modern American expectations. There would be
no such thing as “disposable” anything, dwelling spaces would be smaller,
travel more difficult.
Such is the logic of truly low-carbon, ecosystem-sensitive
living, which requires an ethic of modesty and restraint, the practice of living
within the constraints of community and a willingness to attune human ambition,
societal expectations and mores to what a balanced ecosystem permits. I do not
in the least think I am indulging in “ecotopian” thinking. Human nature
wouldn’t change and people in general would not suddenly become wiser and more wonderful
than they are today. I suspect that many Americans, if deposited suddenly in
this kind of society, would not find it to their liking. Yet I also suspect
there might be satisfactions of a different kind than we are mostly accustomed
to.
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Comments
That's good to hear. I have read about some of the restoration efforts in South Africa in "Our Once and Future Planet," by Paddy Woodworth. It seems that the more ecological restoration involves local residents, the better for all concerned.
Wondering if you could give me some advice? I'm kind of a neighbor in northwestern McHenry County living in the midst of farm fields. I'm working on establishing a pollinator friendly habitat here on our 5 acres (or at least on a small part of it). One of my big issues is quack grass and bind weed. I just can't get rid of it. Before planting in a new area I'd like to get as much out as possible and wondering if you have any suggestions or does it matter? Could the native plants eventually crowd it out?
By the way, my husband is a bee keeper and as with all bee keepers is really struggling keeping a hive alive into even a second season. Ariel spraying has increased in the last few years. He is registered with the state and any farmer nearby is supposed to contact him before spraying so he can close his hives. Sometimes they do.
Also I am reading a book, "Beyond the War on Invasive Species: A Permaculture Approach to Ecosystem Restoration" by Tao Orion and was wondering if you had read it and your opinion.
Really look forward to your blog. Thank you!!
Margaret
Thanks for stopping by. You asked some good questions, that don't have short, easy answers. I wonder if we could touch base off-line? I struggle with bindweed and quackgrass myself, but on a much smaller scale. I'm going to ask a couple folks I know what they think.
I'll be giving a talk Tuesday night at the Fremont Library for Lake-to-Prairie Wild Ones, which might not be too far away from you, depending on where you live. It would be great if you could come. Information can be found here: Healthy Soil, Native Plants and Backyard Carbon Sequestration.
Or you could email me.
I haven't read the book --I'll check it out.