Genetic information and ecosystem health: arguments for the application of chaos theory to identify boundary conditions for ecosystem management

Environ Health Perspect. 1994 Dec;102 Suppl 12(Suppl 12):71-4. doi: 10.1289/ehp.94102s1271.

Abstract

To meet the demands for goods and services of an exponentially growing human population, global ecosystems will come under increasing human management. The hallmark of successful ecosystem management will be long-term ecosystem stability. Ecosystems and the genetic information and processes which underlie interactions of organisms with the environment in populations and communities exhibit behaviors which have nonlinear characteristics. Nonlinear mathematical formulations describing deterministic chaos have been used successfully to model such systems in physics, chemistry, economics, physiology, and epidemiology. This approach can be extended to ecotoxicology and can be used to investigate how changes in genetic information determine the behavior of populations and communities. This article seeks to provide the arguments for such an approach and to give initial direction to the search for the boundary conditions within which lies ecosystem stability. The identification of a theoretical framework for ecotoxicology and the parameters which drive the underlying model is a critical component in the formulation of a prioritized research agenda and appropriate ecosystem management policy and regulation.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Ecosystem*
  • Environmental Monitoring
  • Environmental Pollution / prevention & control
  • Genetics, Population*
  • Humans
  • Nonlinear Dynamics*