Very interesting article and subject considering we are in a terrible urgency 
to restore so much degraded land and to start producing food in a more 
sustainable way.
It is not about advocating for replacing a native forest with a human-assembled 
ecosystem of course, but starting replacing monoculture agricultural fields, 
pastures, degraded abandoned lands with a forested ecosystem assembled by 
humans with the purpose to provide food is probably the future of our species 
and a step towards real sustainability.
Yes, unfortunately "applied projects" hardly are ever published but in the 
world of permaculture, edible forest gardening and the alike people are trying 
to create diverse self-maintaining forested ecosystems that provide for human 
needs (food, fuel, fodder, fiber, timber) in a sustainable manner.
This approach might allow humans to contribute positively to life on this 
planet rather than negatively as we have been historically accustomed to do.
Here a list of institutes I am aware of that research on and promote this type 
of approach to agriculture and human sustenance:

Temperate:
http://www.edibleforestgardens.com/about_gardening
http://www.apiosinstitute.org/
http://www.agroforestry.co.uk/forgndg.html
Subtropical:
http://www.permaculturenews.org/about-permaculture-and-the-pri/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ca3SRjHfMX8

I hope to see the scientific community putting more effort in this type of 
urgently needed research and projects.

Francesca






________________________________
 From: Richard Boyce <boy...@nku.edu>
To: ECOLOG-L@LISTSERV.UMD.EDU 
Sent: Thursday, August 29, 2013 5:01 PM
Subject: [ECOLOG-L] Human-assembled ecosystem
 

Here's a *very* interesting story on the human-assembled ecosystems of 
Ascension Island in the tropical South Atlantic: 
http://e360.yale.edu/feature/on_a_remote_island_lessons__in_how_ecosystems_function/2683/

I suspect that further research here may challenge our ideas regarding 
community assembly.

================================
Richard L. Boyce, Ph.D.
Director, Environmental Science Program
Professor
Department of Biological Sciences, SC 150
Northern Kentucky University
Nunn Drive
Highland Heights, KY  41099  USA

859-572-1407 (tel.)
859-572-5639 (fax)
boy...@nku.edu<mailto:boy...@nku.edu>
http://www.nku.edu/~boycer/
=================================

"One of the advantages of being disorderly is that one is constantly making 
exciting discoveries." - A.A. Milne

Reply via email to