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      The “Balance of Nature”—Evolution of a Panchreston

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      PLoS Biology
      Public Library of Science

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          Abstract

          The notion of a “balance of nature” stretches back at least to the ancient Greeks, but with widely varying conceptions. Originally seen as bestowed by God to protect humankind, after Darwin, the balance came to be seen as fragile, arising by natural selection, and requiring human assistance for maintenance.

          Abstract

          The earliest concept of a balance of nature in Western thought saw it as being provided by gods but requiring human aid or encouragement for its maintenance. With the rise of Greek natural philosophy, emphasis shifted to traits gods endowed species with at the outset, rather than human actions, as key to maintaining the balance. The dominance of a constantly intervening God in the Middle Ages lessened interest in the inherent features of nature that would contribute to balance, but the Reformation led to renewed focus on such features, particularly traits of species that would maintain all of them but permit none to dominate nature. Darwin conceived of nature in balance, and his emphasis on competition and frequent tales of felicitous species interactions supported the idea of a balance of nature. But Darwin radically changed its underlying basis, from God to natural selection. Wallace was perhaps the first to challenge the very notion of a balance of nature as an undefined entity whose accuracy could not be tested. His skepticism was taken up again in the 20th century, culminating in a widespread rejection of the idea of a balance of nature by academic ecologists, who focus rather on a dynamic, often chaotic nature buffeted by constant disturbances. The balance-of-nature metaphor, however, lives on in large segments of the public, representing a fragile aspect of nature and biodiversity that it is our duty to protect.

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          When is an island community in equilibrium?

          To determine whether the number of species in a biota is in equilibrium requires a colonization model. In a simple Markov model, each species' extinction and immigration probabilities are estimated independently from available data. For one inland and two island avifaunas, a simulation with these probabilities shows that the trajectories of species richness through time do not manifest the regulatory tendencies expected if species interactions cause species richness to be continuously redressed toward an equilibrium.
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            Author and article information

            Journal
            PLoS Biol
            PLoS Biol
            plos
            plosbiol
            PLoS Biology
            Public Library of Science (San Francisco, USA )
            1544-9173
            1545-7885
            October 2014
            7 October 2014
            : 12
            : 10
            : e1001963
            Affiliations
            [1]Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee, United States
            Author notes

            The author has declared that no competing interests exist.

            Article
            PBIOLOGY-D-14-02513
            10.1371/journal.pbio.1001963
            4188511
            25290954
            969529df-cc40-4c62-a324-e8770e66927e
            Copyright @ 2014

            This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

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            Pages: 4
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            No funding was received for this work.
            Categories
            Perspective
            Biology and Life Sciences

            Life sciences
            Life sciences

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