Registro completo |
Provedor de dados: |
Ecology and Society
|
País: |
Canada
|
Título: |
Contemporary Visions of Progress in Ecology and Thoughts for the Future
|
Autores: |
Starzomski, Brian M; University of British Columbia; starzom@zoology.ubc.ca
Cardinale, Bradley J; Department of Zoology, University of Wisconsin-Madison; bjcardinale@facstaff.wisc.edu
Dunne, Jennifer A; Santa Fe Institute; jdunne@santafe.edu
Hillery, Melinda J; Centre for Ecosystem Management, Edith Cowan University; m.hillery@ecu.edu.au
Holt, Carrie A; School of Resource and Environmental Management, Simon Fraser University; cholt@sfu.ca
Krawchuk, Meg A; Department of Renewable Resources, University of Alberta; megk@ualberta.ca
Lage, Melissa; Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Brown University; Melissa_Lage@Brown.edu
McMahon, Sean; Complex Systems Group, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Tennessee; seanmcm@utk.edu
Melnychuk, Michael C; Fisheries Centre, Department of Zoology, University of British Columbia; m.melnychuk@fisheries.ubc.ca
|
Data: |
2004-05-19
|
Ano: |
2004
|
Palavras-chave: |
Cross-discipline research
Foundations of ecology
Information-sharing database
Scale
Statistics
Terminology
|
Resumo: |
Although ecological research is progressing rapidly, the answers to certain key questions continue to elude us. This paper considers several of the contemporary challenges facing ecology. (1) Terminology is voluminous and often poorly defined, resulting in inefficient communication. (2) The concept of scale affects our inferences about system structure and function, requiring us to continue an almost heuristic investigation of breaks, domains, and integration. New tools that more explicitly incorporate scalar issues will need to be developed for progress to take place in the field of ecology. (3) Increasingly, it is expected that applied questions will be solved in less than a year. This demand for solutions from ecologists often produces short-term and inadequate responses. (4) How can ecologists improve communication between subdisciplines, with undergraduate students, and with the public? How will ecology be done in the future, and by whom? We provide some background to these observations and questions, and offer some potential solutions from the viewpoint of young practicing ecologists.
|
Tipo: |
Peer-Reviewed Reports
|
Idioma: |
Inglês
|
Identificador: |
vol9/iss1/art14/
|
Editor: |
Resilience Alliance
|
Formato: |
text/html application/pdf
|
Fonte: |
Ecology and Society; Vol. 9, No. 1 (2004)
|
|