A social ecology approach and applications of urban ecosystem and landscape analyses: a case study of Baltimore, Maryland

The early interactions between plant, animal, and human ecology in the 1920s in the United States provide an initial basis for understanding and directing an integrated ecosystem approach to the study of sociocultural and biophysical patterns and processes of present day cities. However, whereas the human ecology approach of the 1920s and 30s was interested in metaphorical similarities with plant and animal ecologists, we propose a more integrated approach to human ecosystem observation and analysis. A critical feature to an integrated, urban ecosystem approach is the ability of researchers to address the spatial heterogeneity of urban ecosystems; i.e. the development and dynamics of spatial heterogeneity and the influences of spatial patterns on cycles and fluxes of critical resources (e.g. energy, materials, nutrients, genetic and nongenetic information, population, labor, and capital). An important question in this context is how differential access to and control over critical resources affect the structure and function of urban ecosystems.To address this heterogeneity, we illustrate a human ecosystem and landscape approach and how the concept of social differentiation can be applied spatially at different scales with a case study from our research in Baltimore, Maryland. Further, we identify different methods, tools, and techniques that can be used for an integrated, urban ecosystem approach.

[1]  Carl N. Degler In Search of Human Nature: The Decline and Revival of Darwinism in American Social Thought , 1991 .

[2]  Eugene P. Odum,et al.  THE GRANITE GARDEN: URBAN NATURE AND HUMAN DESIGN , 1984, Landscape Journal.

[3]  G. Lenski,et al.  Power and Privilege: A Theory of Social Stratification , 1984 .

[4]  W. Michelson Man and His Urban Environment: a sociological approach , 1970 .

[5]  A. Tansley The Use and Abuse of Vegetational Concepts and Terms , 1935 .

[6]  M. Waters Review of Steven J. Gold, Refugee Communities: A Comparative Field Study (Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications, 1992) , 1993 .

[7]  William R. Burch,et al.  The human ecosystem Part I: The human ecosystem as an organizing concept in ecosystem management , 1997 .

[8]  Amos H. Hawley,et al.  Human Ecology: A Theoretical Essay , 1986 .

[9]  M. Okada THE SCOPE OF HUMAN ECOLOGY , 1963 .

[10]  E. Mayr The Growth of Biological Thought: Diversity, Evolution, and Inheritance , 1983 .

[11]  H. Molotch,et al.  Urban Fortunes: The Political Economy of Place , 1987 .

[12]  S. Pimm The Balance of Nature?: Ecological Issues in the Conservation of Species and Communities , 1992 .

[13]  R. P. McIntosh The Background of Ecology: Concept and Theory , 1985 .

[14]  W. Burch,et al.  Social behavior, natural resources, and the environment , 1972 .

[15]  F. Clements Scientific Books: Plant Succession. An Analysis of the Development of Vegetation , 2009 .

[16]  H. Spencer The principles of sociology , 1880 .

[17]  M. L. Cadenasso,et al.  Landscape Ecology: Spatial Heterogeneity in Ecological Systems , 1995, Science.

[18]  R. Masters The nature of politics , 1989 .

[19]  David Rusk,et al.  Cities without Suburbs , 1993 .

[20]  Carl W. Condit,et al.  Nature's Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West , 1991 .

[21]  W. Burch Daydreams and nightmares: A sociological essay on the American environment , 1997 .

[22]  I. Mcharg Design With Nature , 1969 .

[23]  Gerald L. Young,et al.  Human Ecology as an Interdisciplinary Concept: A Critical Inquiry , 1974 .

[24]  L. B. Leopold,et al.  Water In Environmental Planning , 1978 .

[25]  C. D. Harris,et al.  The Nature of Cities , 1945, The Urban Geography Reader.

[26]  M. Mann The sources of social power , 2012 .

[27]  Delbert Miller,et al.  Handbook of research design and social measurement , 1993 .

[28]  T. Malthus An essay on the principle of population, as it affects the future improvement of society , 2006 .

[29]  G. PITT-RIVERS Human Ecology , 1936, Nature.

[30]  A. Garfinkel,et al.  Forms of explanation : rethinking the questions in social theory , 1982 .

[31]  R. O'Neill A Hierarchical Concept of Ecosystems. , 1986 .

[32]  Amos H. Hawley,et al.  Human Ecology: A Theory of Community Structure , 1950 .

[33]  Dennis Hume Wrong Power: Its Forms, Bases and Uses , 1979 .

[34]  C. Krebs The balance of nature? Ecological issues in the conservation of species and communities , 1992 .

[35]  Louise Fortmann,et al.  Whose trees?: proprietary dimensions of forestry , 1988 .

[36]  Wendell Bell Foundations of futures studies: Human science for a new era volume II: Values, objectivity, and the good society , 1997 .

[37]  Homer Hoyt,et al.  The Structure and Growth of Residential Neighborhoods in American Cities. , 1940 .

[38]  W. S. Robinson Ecological correlations and the behavior of individuals. , 1950, International journal of epidemiology.

[39]  W. J. Goode,et al.  The Celebration of Heroes: Prestige as a Social Control System , 1978 .

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

[41]  Leo F. Schnore,et al.  Social Morphology and Human Ecology , 1958, American Journal of Sociology.

[42]  W. Catton Foundations of Human Ecology , 1994 .

[43]  W. Rees Urban ecosystems: the human dimension , 1997, Urban Ecosystems.

[44]  Homer Hoyt,et al.  THE STRUCTURE AND GROWTH OF RESIDENTIAL NEIGHBORHOODS IN AMERICAN CITIES , 1940 .

[45]  Michael Fisher,et al.  Dinosaur in a Haystack , 1995 .

[46]  D. Timms,et al.  The urban mosaic : towards a theory of residential differentiation , 1971 .

[47]  P. Vitousek Beyond Global Warming: Ecology and Global Change , 1994 .

[48]  Anne Whiston Spirn,et al.  The Granite Garden, Urban Nature and Human Design , 1984 .

[49]  D. Johnston,et al.  The relationship between socio-economic factors and the loss of biodiversity: first efforts at theoretical and quantitative models. , 1996 .

[50]  Richard L. Morrill,et al.  The spatial organization of society , 1972 .

[51]  D. Harvey,et al.  The Urban Experience , 2020, Bastard Feudalism, English Society and the Law.

[52]  R. Gardner,et al.  Quantitative Methods in Landscape Ecology , 1991 .

[53]  I. Zonneveld,et al.  The land unit — A fundamental concept in landscape ecology, and its applications , 1989, Landscape Ecology.

[54]  Jean E. McKendry,et al.  The role of geography in extending biodiversity gap analaysis , 1993 .

[55]  Michael M. Cernea,et al.  Putting people first : sociological variables in rural development , 1987 .

[56]  J. Hewlett,et al.  An outline of forest hydrology. , 1969 .

[57]  W. Firey Land Use in Central Boston , 1947 .

[58]  W. Burch,et al.  Social Science Applications in Asian Agroforestry , 1992 .

[59]  T. Allen,et al.  Toward a Unified Ecology. , 1994 .

[60]  I. Zonneveld,et al.  Scope and Concepts of Landscape Ecology as an Emerging Science , 1990 .

[61]  D E B Pollard Forms of Explanation: Rethinking the Questions in Social Theory , 1982 .

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

[63]  W. Burch,et al.  Rural Sociology and the Environment , 1988 .

[64]  W. Burch,et al.  Measuring the social impact of natural resource policies , 1984 .

[65]  Joel B. Hagen,et al.  An Entangled Bank: The Origins of Ecosystem Ecology , 1993 .

[66]  Frederic E. Clements,et al.  Research methods in ecology , 1905 .

[67]  Amos H. Hawley Human Ecology—A Theory of Community Structure , 1950 .

[68]  Timothy F. H. Allen,et al.  Toward a Unified Ecology , 1995 .

[69]  Eshref Shevky,et al.  Social area analysis: theory, illustrative application, and computational procedures, , 1972 .

[70]  K. Bailey,et al.  Sociocultural Versus Neoclassical Ecology: A Contribution to the Problem of Scope in Sociology , 1971 .

[71]  G. Lenski,et al.  Power and Privilege: A Theory of Social Stratification. , 1967 .

[72]  Mary C. Waters Review of John Stanfield (ed.), A History of Race Relations Research: First Generation Recollections (Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications, 1993) , 1994 .

[73]  Simon A. Levin,et al.  2 – Concepts of Scale at the Local Level , 1993 .

[74]  William Foote Whyte,et al.  Learning From The Field: A Guide From Experience , 1984 .

[75]  W. W. Wagar,et al.  Foundations of Future Studies: Human Science for a New Era , 1998 .

[76]  J. Agnew,et al.  Place and Politics : The Geographical Mediation of State and Society , 1988 .

[77]  F. Golley A History of the Ecosystem Concept in Ecology: More Than the Sum o f the Parts , 1993 .

[78]  D. Bromley,et al.  Environment and economy , 1991 .

[79]  Daniel B. Botkin,et al.  Discordant Harmonies: A New Ecology for the Twenty-first Century , 1990 .

[80]  O. D. Duncan From Social System to Ecosystem , 1961 .

[81]  Michael Mann,et al.  The Sources of Social Power. Volume 1: A History of Power from the Beginning to A.D. 1760 , 1988 .

[82]  Robert Olby,et al.  In the Name of Eugenics: Genetics and the Uses of Human Heredity , 1985 .

[83]  W. Firey Sentiment and symbolism as ecological variables. , 1945 .

[84]  S. Pickett,et al.  A conceptual framework for the study of human ecosystems in urban areas , 1997, Urban Ecosystems.

[85]  B. Benedict,et al.  Man in Society: A Biosocial View. , 1976 .

[86]  W. Burch [People, trees and participation on the urban frontier] , 1993 .

[87]  V. Berghe,et al.  Man In Society: A Biosocial View , 1975 .

[88]  J. Fox The problem of scale in community resource management , 1992 .

[89]  R. Mckenzie The Ecological Approach to the Study of the Human Community , 1924, American Journal of Sociology.

[90]  J. Liaschenko,et al.  In the Mind of the Beholder , 2007, Qualitative health research.