What does the wealth of the world represent

Siry's Ecology Web Page

Determining criteria


needed to judge ecological values that inform decisions and designs


Fundamentals | Weal | Wealth formula | basis for | example | values | Lesson | Ian McHarg | Model | Islands


The hill fields of the Tuscan landscape in summer.

Ecological Critertia

I.

Systematic -- the combined impact of the constituent parts of a whole is greater than the sum of the individual impacts acting separately.

 

systemic thinking, means that connections among primary and secondary components can be examined, discussed and tested to see their reaction to one another.

 

II.

Causality (the reasons how something comes about or occurs)

A specified cause leads to a predictable effect

affects - evidence of an exterior impact on something

consequences - the quantitative or qualitative

feedback

positive (+) versus (-) negative

reinforcing -versus- countering

buffers

Traffic patterns

 

III.

    Three ecological laws

        1. Entanglement
        2. Material conservation
        3. Energy degradation and conservation
        4.  

      These three natural laws or ecological rules are ways to understand ecological integrity but that requires the exercise of an ecological imagination. More on rules of ecology.


    Weal

    Water --> Energy --> Air --> Landscape

    weal

        weal is short for habitat's elements, or constituent parts


         

        Wealth

        Landscape
        times
        vegetal & animal work
        equals
        product
        tree  
         
        Land
        X
        Labor
        =
        Capital
        Nature
        is greater than or equal to
        Natural Resources mixed with Human Resources
        yields
        Wealth


        Biogeochemical cycles

        Geological -- peat, coal, diamonds, limestone (CAC03) ----> phosphate ---------->

        growth rates

        Biological -- humus, humic acid, -----------------------> phosphorus ---------->

        ATP, cellular power

        Chemical -- carbon bonds, nitrogen -----------------------> nitrate --------------->

        RNA, DNA, proteins.


        Marshlands and values

         

        "A natural reciprocal nurturing of ocean and earth creates abundant wildlife in coastal wetlands. Here, salt and fresh water flow together in tidal marshes, creating rare shorelines of unsurpassed natural fertility by converting solar energy into food.

        Swelling tidal fluctuations recycle vital nutrients that encourage rapid vegetation growth followed by quick decay..... Both native and migratory wildlife thrive on the tide-mulched marsh grass fields."

         

    "Coastal bodies of water where streams or rivers flow into the ocean are called estuaries."

line

criteria needed to judge ecological values

practical example

limits based on capacity

example of acreage limits in an urban setting


Lesson

You may never do merely one thing because the game of nature is a zero sum game which is stacked against you and it is played by every living thing so that all actions have consequences.

carbon footprint

Biosphere

coevolution

Ecological integrity

Ethics

Global warming

Nature

Population growth

The water crisis

Varieties of nature


Fundamentals | Weal | Wealth formula | basis for | example | values | Lesson | Ian McHarg | Model