The Community Concept in Community Ecology

We argue that ecologists have conceived of the community concept in at least three ways (typological, functional, and statistical), and that ecologists have used “community,” as indicated by ecological terminology, in two main ways (type and group). The typological conception emphasizes phenomenological descriptions of co-occurring species, the functional conception emphasizes mathematical relationships among co-occurring species, and the statistical conception emphasizes the frequency of species’ co-occurrence. The type usage emphasizes idealized “types,” and the group usage emphasizes quantitative boundaries and/or mathematically precise interactions. We further argue that all of these senses of “community” are problematic. Ecologists seem unable to say precisely what a community is, in part because of the difficulty of (a) measuring community properties, (b) determining the temporal and spatial scale for various communities, and (c) evaluating the different meanings attributed to community terms. We suggest that although (a) and (b) appear to be difficulties that are heuristically useful for future ecological theorizing, (c) does not.

[1]  T. Allen,et al.  Toward a Unified Ecology. , 1993 .

[2]  G. Eiten How names are used for vegetation , 1992 .

[3]  K. Shrader-Frechette,et al.  Community Ecology, Scale, and the Instability of the Stability Concept , 1992, PSA: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association.

[4]  Lawrence B. Slobodkin,et al.  A Critique for Ecology , 1991 .

[5]  Robert E. Ulanowicz,et al.  Aristotelean causalities in ecosystem development , 1990 .

[6]  F. Gilbert,et al.  Size, shape, competition, and community structure in hoverflies (Diptera: Syrphidae) , 1990 .

[7]  May C. Chen Toward a New Philosophy of Biology: Observations of an Evolutionist , 1990, The Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine.

[8]  R. Vadas Food web patterns in ecosystems: a reply to Fretwell and Oksanen , 1989 .

[9]  Robert P. McIntosh,et al.  Citation Classics of Ecology , 1989, The Quarterly Review of Biology.

[10]  M. Cody 15. Discussion: Structure and Assembly of Communities , 1989 .

[11]  E. Odum,et al.  Ecology and Our Endangered Life-Support Systems , 1989 .

[12]  Richard Brewer The science of ecology , 1988 .

[13]  L. Oksanen Ecosystem Organization: Mutualism and Cybernetics or Plain Darwinian Struggle for Existence? , 1988, The American Naturalist.

[14]  P. Taylor,et al.  Technocratic optimism, H. T. Odum, and the partial transformation of ecological metaphor after World War II , 1988, Journal of the history of biology.

[15]  Earl D. McCoy,et al.  Identifying Biotic Boundaries Along Environmental Gradients , 1986 .

[16]  S. Ferson,et al.  Competing Reviews, or Why do Connell and Schoener Disagree? , 1986, The American Naturalist.

[17]  Louis Legendre,et al.  Succession of Species within a Community: Chronological Clustering, with Applications to Marine and Freshwater Zooplankton , 1985, The American Naturalist.

[18]  S. Casper,et al.  The plant communities , 1985 .

[19]  S. Wratten,et al.  Principles of Ecology , 1984, Springer Netherlands.

[20]  Daniel Simberloff,et al.  Ecological Communities: Conceptual Issues and the Evidence , 1984 .

[21]  Roger J. Lederer,et al.  Ecology and field biology , 1984 .

[22]  Donald R. Strong,et al.  Natural Variability and the Manifold Mechanisms of Ecological Communities , 1983, The American Naturalist.

[23]  James F. Quinn,et al.  On Hypothesis Testing in Ecology and Evolution , 1983, The American Naturalist.

[24]  D. Farner The growth of biological thought. Diversity, evolution, and inheritance , 1983 .

[25]  Thomas B. Starr,et al.  Hierarchy: Perspectives for Ecological Complexity , 1982 .

[26]  John Vandermeer,et al.  Elementary Mathematical Ecology , 1982 .

[27]  G. Salt A Comment on the Use of the Term Emergent Properties , 1979, The American Naturalist.

[28]  P. Dayton,et al.  Ecology: A Science and a Religion , 1979 .

[29]  E. Odum,et al.  The Emergence of Ecology as a New Integrative Discipline , 1977, Science.

[30]  Hal Caswell,et al.  Community Structure: A Neutral Model Analysis , 1976 .

[31]  S. Fretwell The Impact of Robert Macarthur on Ecology , 1975 .

[32]  E. C. Pielou Population and Community Ecology: Principles and Methods , 1974 .

[33]  C. Krebs Ecology: The Experimental Analysis of Distribution and Abundance , 1973 .

[34]  I. Hiscock Communities and Ecosystems , 1970, The Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine.

[35]  E. J. Gaboury The new ecology. , 1970, Canadian journal of public health = Revue canadienne de sante publique.

[36]  E. Odum The strategy of ecosystem development. , 1969, Science.

[37]  A. Boughey Contemporary readings in ecology , 1969 .

[38]  R. Whittaker,et al.  GRADIENT ANALYSIS OF VEGETATION* , 1967, Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society.

[39]  G. Williams Adaptation and Natural Selection , 2018 .

[40]  J. Wiens On group selection and Wynne-Edwards' hypothesis. , 1966, American scientist.

[41]  F. Clements,et al.  Plant Succession and Indicators , 1964 .

[42]  S. Goldhor Ecology , 1964, The Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine.

[43]  H. C. Hanson Dictionary of Ecology , 1962 .

[44]  C. Moore The Plant Community , 1962 .

[45]  J. Ovington Quantitative Ecology and the Woodland Ecosystem Concept , 1962 .

[46]  J. T. Curtis,et al.  The Vegetation of Wisconsin , 1960 .

[47]  R. Whittaker RECENT EVOLUTION OF ECOLOGICAL CONCEPTS IN RELATION TO THE EASTERN FORESTS OF NORTH AMERICA , 1957 .

[48]  F. Evans,et al.  Ecosystem as the Basic Unit in Ecology. , 1956, Science.

[49]  Robert H. Whittaker,et al.  A Consideration of Climax Theory: The Climax as a Population and Pattern , 1953 .

[50]  J. T. Curtis,et al.  An Upland Forest Continuum in the Prairie‐Forest Border Region of Wisconsin , 1951 .

[51]  G. E. Hutchinson,et al.  CIRCULAR CAUSAL SYSTEMS IN ECOLOGY , 1948, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[52]  W. B. Turrill,et al.  The Study of Plant Communities , 1948, Nature.

[53]  S. A. Cain Characteristics of Natural Areas and Factors in Their Development , 1947 .

[54]  Raymond L. Lindeman The trophic-dynamic aspect of ecology , 1942 .

[55]  Charles C. Elton Animal Ecology , 1927, Nature.

[56]  H. Gleason The individualistic concept of the plant association , 1926 .

[57]  Henry C. Cowles,et al.  The Physiographic Ecology of Chicago and Vicinity; A Study of the Origin, Development, and Classification of Plant Societies , 1901, Botanical Gazette.