From the beginning of man's exploitation of knowledge and technology
he has improved his own chances for survival and reordered the
environment to suit himself. In most instances, these dual goals have
been accomplished at some price to the environment.
There is no evidence that in his early exploitation of technology man
was any less cruel and senseless than he is today. Early history
supports the hypothesis that man evaluated each new discovery in terms
of its death-evoking potential to his enemies and his own survival.
Later, as knowledge and particularly as language developed, technology
as a means of producing wealth predominated. With every advance in
technology the planet was further plundered as its wealth was
discovered, and these discoveries led to the costly political struggles
in which the newest technical devices pitted man against man for control
of the world's wealth.
Today, the United States is extolled as a leading example of
technological development and enlightenment on the one hand, and, on the
other, is castigated for using an unfair share of the world's resources
to sustain that standard. Japan is emerging as a high technology nation
through the exploitation of scientific and engineering development, but
the price is high in terms of stress-induced mortality and in pollution.
Simultaneously, Japan is enjoying a standard of living unprecedented in
the Orient.
The most technically advanced nationsWest Germany, the United
States, and Japanall have the most severe pollution problems as
well as the highest standards of living. But it can be argued whether
the cost in ecological impairment is justified by the benefits derived
from this highly industrialized condition.
The onward rush of technology raises a number of serious questions
for the future. Where will new sources of energy come from to drive the
machines of technology? Will the water supply last? Will there be enough
minerals to satisfy technology's insatiable appetite? Will the continued
pollution of the air make city life untenable? Will development destroy
all of nature? Will the nation be paved from coast to coast? Will the
wilderness or any natural area survive? Will cities perish in their own
waste, filth, and crime?
Technology did not release man from the natural ecosystem but
involved him in a new one. Biologically he changed little but he
modified his environment through the use of tools. The ecosystem concept
did not change either but new factors were introduced in the form of man
and his tools. Man's ecosystem does not differ from other ecosystems,
except for the proliferation of technological devices that directly and
indirectly aid man in ordering and controlling his environment and
producing wealth. Thus, technology in the hands of man became a new,
potent ecological factor.
As an organism, man responds to the same biological and physical
factors as always but modern man has altered the human environment with
his technology and this has affected him. For example, vaccination
against smallpox and the pollution of rivers with agricultural and
industrial wastes are two diverse ways in which technology has altered
the human environment.
Man's basic requirements for survival do not vary from place to place
nor from time to time. As a biological organism he is a mammal and has
mammalian requirementshe must obtain food, reproduce and avoid
predators, provide protection for the young until they reach the age of
reproduction, and so on. The presence or absence of technology allows
man to control the environment and provides a high potential for its
destructive degradation. As technology has increased, man's control over
the environment has increased and so has his need for energy.
Man has always been part of an ecosystem. in earlier days he lived
and died in a predator-prey relationship, but with the advent of
technology, man, for the most part, freed himself from his predators.
Once free from predators, man could concentrate on improving his chances
of survival by husbanding foodeither through hunting or
agricultureand by securing his environment and modifying it to
suit his needs.
Primitive men in primitive societies lived more harmoniously with the
environment. Having no way to change the environment, they adapted to it
and lived in harmony with it. Even so, primitive man may have altered
environments to some extent. Setting fires, for instance, may have been
a simple method for altering environment, particularly in the prairies,
the onset of agriculture. But it remained for modern man with his
technological devices to dramatically alter the environment, and in so
doing he has psychologically attempted to place himself outside the
ecosystem and ignore the effects of his technology. Modern man must
recognize that he is an indivisible part of the biosphere, that
everything he does affects it, and that the enormous quantity of energy
available to him is a potent factor that cannot be ignored.
The communities of man fit all the requirements of ecosystems. They
have elements that stabilize them and those that destabilize them.
Communities of man that are diversified tend, like communities of plants
and animals, to have great stability. Those that are simple tend to be
unstable depending upon the factors that impinge upon them. One need
only compare a great city with many sources of employment and wealth
production with one-industry towns to recognize the relationship between
the ecosystem of man and the ecosystem of other organisms. Ecologically
they are quite similar.
The principle of ecosystem dynamics is that ecosystem stability
depends upon the flow of energy into the ecosystem, and as the system
optimizes its use of energy it becomes stable. All ecosystems are either
at a steady state condition and have great stability, or they are
approaching the steady state, or they have passed the steady state and
are going into a decline. The steady state represents the balanced use
of the energy available to the community in relation to the factors
influencing it. In exactly the same way that equilibrium condition makes
possible the thermodynamic analysis of energy systems, so the ecological
steady state makes possible the analysis of ecosystems. The ecosystem
steady state is the thermodynamic equivalent of "balance of nature."
A number of prerequisites for ecosystem analysis are necessary. The
first is to recognize the steady state when it is achieved, and the
second is to recognize developmental stages on both sides of the steady
state. It is necessary to understand that as long as uniform or stable
physical conditions persist, the ecosystem will reach and maintain
steady state in relationship to those factors. And it is equally
important to recognize that, in addition to the usual factors, i.e.,
sunlight, rainfall, wind, temperature, water, and the seasonal
distribution of these factors, man, even without his technology, is an
important ecological factor. With his technology he becomes a formidable
ecological factor for both good and evil.
Man can move mountains, pollute lakes, replace the tall grass prairie
with corn, and convert the eastern deciduous forest to farms and finally
to a megalopolis, It is interesting to consider that in the tall grass
prairie, tall grassbig bluestem or Indian grasswas replaced
by another tall grass, corn, and that the ecosystem that developed is as
stable as the ecosystem that it replaced.
|