How foreign is the past?/Lyons et al. reply
Since Humboldt and Darwin, ecologists have puzzled over what determines community assembly and structure and how community structure may change with time. Human activity is one potential driver. Impacts of modern human societies on the environment and its biota are massive, with many forms of pollut...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature (London) 2016-10, Vol.538 (7626), p.E1 |
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creator | Telford, Richard J Chipperfield, Joseph D Birks, Hilary H Birks, H John B Lyons, S Kathleen Miller, Joshua H Amatangel, Kathryn L Behrensmeyer, Anna K Bercovici, Antoine Blois, Jessica L Davis, Matt DiMichele, William Du, Andrew Eronen, Jussi T Faith, J Tyler Graves, Gary R Jud, Nathan Labandeira, Conrad Looy, Cindy V McGill, Brian Patterson, David Pineda-Munoz, Silvia Potts, Richard Riddle, Brett Terry, Rebecca Tóth, Anikó Ulrich, Werner Villaseñor, Amelia Wing, Scott Anderson, Heidi Anderson, John Gotelli, Nicholas J |
description | Since Humboldt and Darwin, ecologists have puzzled over what determines community assembly and structure and how community structure may change with time. Human activity is one potential driver. Impacts of modern human societies on the environment and its biota are massive, with many forms of pollution, loss and fragmentation of habitats, and extensive introductions of exotic species changing many ecological and biogeographical patterns. Prehistoric societies might be expected to have had a much lower impact on their environment. However, Lyons and colleagues1 propose that biotic communities were so fragile that the limited settlements, agriculture, and associated activities 6,000 years ago in North America were sufficient to fundamentally change community-assembly rules. |
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subjects | Biogeography Biota Community structure Datasets Ecology Evolution Habitat fragmentation Introduced species Islands Paleobiology |
title | How foreign is the past?/Lyons et al. reply |
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