[permaculture-oceania] FW: Direct scientific support for permaculture
Cameron Little
cameron.little at unsw.edu.au
Tue Jun 13 12:22:37 EST 2006
Forwarded on by Paul Osmond from the US based permaculture at lists.ibiblio.org
...
>
>Here is some recently published research that lends direct scientific
>support to the principles of permaculture:
>
>
> http://www.nsf.gov/news/news_summ.jsp?cntn_id=107018&org=olpa&from=news
>
>
>The link above is to an NSF summary of an article from the June 1 issue
>of "Nature", one of the most prestigious and widely-read journals in
>the natural sciences. You can download the article from the
>www.nature.com website, but unfortunately the per-article charge is
>rather steep at $30. The link is:
>
>
> http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v441/n7093/edsumm/e060601-11.html
>
>The first paragraph of the article itself reads:
>
> "Human-driven ecosystem simplification has highlighted questions
> about how the number of species in an ecosystem influences its
> functioning. Although biodiversity is now known to affect
> ecosystem productivity, its effects on stability are
> debated. Here we present a long-term experimental field test
> of the diversity-stability hypothesis. During a decade of data
> collection in an experiment that directly controlled the
> number of perennial prairie species, growing-season climate
> varied considerably, causing year-to-year variation in
> abundances of plant species and in ecosystem productivity. We
> found that greater numbers of plant species led to greater
> temporal stability of ecosystem annual aboveground plant
> production. In particular, the decadal temporal stability of
> the ecosystem, whether measured with intervals of two, five or
> ten years, was significantly greater at higher plant diversity
> and tended to increase as plots matured. Ecosystem stability
> was also positively dependent on root mass, which is a measure
> of perenniating biomass. Temporal stability of the ecosystem
> increased with diversity, despite a lower temporal stability
> of individual species, because of both portfolio (statistical
> averaging) and overyielding effects. However, we found no
> evidence of a covariance effect. Our results indicate that the
> reliable, efficient and sustainable supply of some foods (for
> example, livestock fodder), biofuels and ecosystem services
> can be enhanced by the use of biodiversity."
>
>This is actually a really big deal, because obvious as this finding may
>seem to those of us who are permaculture "converts", in science it is
>very important to have strong empirical support for your most basic
>assumptions... and that diversity enhances stability and productivity
>certainly goes to the heart of one of permaculture's most basic
>assumptions. Having these controlled experimental results published in
>"Nature" is powerful ammunition in any argument with permaculture
>skeptics.
>
>:j
>
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