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=== Since 1900 === Modern ecology is a young science that first attracted substantial scientific attention toward the end of the 19th century (around the same time that evolutionary studies were gaining scientific interest). The scientist [[Ellen Swallow Richards]] adopted the term "[[oekology]]" (which eventually morphed into [[home economics]]) in the U.S. as early as 1892.<ref name="Hunt">{{cite book| last = Hunt| first = Caroline Louisa| title = The life of Ellen H. Richards| publisher = [[Whitcomb & Barrows]]| location = Boston| year = 1912 | url = https://archive.org/details/lifeofellenhrich00huntrich}}</ref> In the early 20th century, ecology transitioned from a more [[metaphysics|descriptive form]] of [[natural history]] to a more [[scientific method|analytical form]] of ''scientific natural history''.<ref name="Kingsland04"/><ref name="McIntosh85" /><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Jones |first=Madison |date=2021-08-08 |title=A Counterhistory of Rhetorical Ecologies |url=https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/02773945.2021.1947517 |journal=Rhetoric Society Quarterly |language=en |volume=51 |issue=4 |pages=336β352 |doi=10.1080/02773945.2021.1947517 |s2cid=238358762 |issn=0277-3945}}</ref> [[Frederic Clements]] published the first American ecology book, ''Research Methods in Ecology'' in 1905,<ref name="Clements05">{{cite book | last1=Clements | first1=F. E. | title=Research methods in ecology | publisher=University Pub. Comp. | place=Lincoln, Neb. | year=1905 | isbn=0-405-10381-6 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vRy-VJctJjcC | access-date=6 January 2020 | archive-date=1 August 2020 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200801074030/https://books.google.com/books?id=vRy-VJctJjcC | url-status=live }}</ref> presenting the idea of plant communities as a [[superorganism]]. This publication launched a debate between ecological holism and individualism that lasted until the 1970s. Clements' superorganism concept proposed that ecosystems progress through regular and determined stages of [[seral development]] that are analogous to the developmental stages of an organism. The Clementsian paradigm was challenged by [[Henry Gleason]],<ref name="Simberloff80"/> who stated that ecological communities develop from the unique and coincidental association of individual organisms. This perceptual shift placed the focus back onto the life histories of individual organisms and how this relates to the development of community associations.<ref name="Gleason26"/> The Clementsian superorganism theory was an overextended application of an [[idealism|idealistic form]] of holism.<ref name="Levins80">{{cite journal|last1=Levins |first1=R. |last2=Lewontin |first2=R. |title=Dialectics and reductionism in ecology |journal=Synthese |volume=43 |pages=47β78 |year=1980 |url=http://www.ecologia.unam.mx/laboratorios/comunidades/pdf/pdf%20curso%20posgrado%20Elena/Tema%201/LevinsLewontinSynthese1980.pdf |doi=10.1007/bf00413856 |s2cid=46984334 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130510183920/http://www.ecologia.unam.mx/laboratorios/comunidades/pdf/pdf%20curso%20posgrado%20Elena/Tema%201/LevinsLewontinSynthese1980.pdf |archive-date=10 May 2013}}</ref><ref name="Wilson88" /> The term "holism" was coined in 1926 by [[Jan Smuts|Jan Christiaan Smuts]], a South African general and polarizing historical figure who was inspired by Clements' superorganism concept.<ref name="Foster08"/>{{Cref2|C}} Around the same time, [[Charles Sutherland Elton|Charles Elton]] pioneered the concept of food chains in his classical book ''Animal Ecology''.<ref name="Elton27">{{cite book|last=Elton|first=C. S.|title=Animal Ecology|publisher=Sidgwick and Jackson|place=London|year=1927|isbn=0-226-20639-4}}</ref> Elton<ref name="Elton27" /> defined ecological relations using concepts of food chains, food cycles, and food size, and described numerical relations among different functional groups and their relative abundance. Elton's 'food cycle' was replaced by 'food web' in a subsequent ecological text.<ref name="Allee32"/> [[Alfred J. Lotka]] brought in many theoretical concepts applying thermodynamic principles to ecology. In 1942, [[Raymond Lindeman]] wrote a landmark paper on the [[Trophic dynamics#Trophic dynamics and multitrophic interactions|trophic dynamics]] of ecology, which was published posthumously after initially being rejected for its theoretical emphasis. Trophic dynamics became the foundation for much of the work to follow on energy and material flow through ecosystems. [[Robert MacArthur]] advanced mathematical theory, predictions, and tests in ecology in the 1950s, which inspired a resurgent school of theoretical mathematical ecologists.<ref name="McIntosh85" /><ref name="Cook77">{{cite journal | last1=Cook | first1=R. E. | title=Raymond Lindeman and the trophic-dynamic concept in ecology | journal=Science | volume=198 | issue=4312 | pages=22β26 | year=1977 | doi=10.1126/science.198.4312.22 | url=http://www.esf.edu/efb/schulz/Seminars/Cook.pdf | bibcode=1977Sci...198...22C | pmid=17741875 | s2cid=30340899 | url-status=live | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121005002320/http://www.esf.edu/efb/schulz/Seminars/Cook.pdf | archive-date=5 October 2012}}</ref><ref name="Odum68">{{cite journal | last1=Odum | first1=E. P. | year=1968 | title=Energy flow in ecosystems: A historical review | journal=American Zoologist | volume=8 | issue=1 | pages=11β18 | jstor=3881528 | doi=10.1093/icb/8.1.11| doi-access=free }}</ref> Ecology has also developed through contributions from other nations, including Russia's [[Vladimir Vernadsky]] and his founding of the biosphere concept in the 1920s<ref name="Ghilarov95"/> and Japan's [[Kinji Imanishi]] and his concepts of harmony in nature and habitat segregation in the 1950s.<ref name="ItΓ΄91"/> Scientific recognition of contributions to ecology from non-English-speaking cultures is hampered by language and translation barriers.<ref name="Ghilarov95" /> {{quote box | quote = This whole chain of poisoning, then, seems to rest on a base of minute plants which must have been the original concentrators. But what of the opposite end of the food chainβthe human being who, in probable ignorance of all this sequence of events, has rigged his fishing tackle, caught a string of fish from the waters of Clear Lake, and taken them home to fry for his supper? | source = Rachel Carson (1962)<ref name="Carson62">{{cite book | last1=Carson | first1=R. | title=Silent Spring | publisher=Houghton Mifflin Company | page=[https://archive.org/details/silentspring00cars_0/page/348 348] | url=https://archive.org/details/silentspring00cars_0| url-access=registration | isbn=0-618-24906-0 | year=2002}}</ref>{{Rp|48}} | width = 30% | align = right}} Ecology surged in popular and scientific interest during the 1960β1970s [[environmental movement]]. There are strong historical and scientific ties between ecology, environmental management, and protection.<ref name="McIntosh85" /> The historical emphasis and poetic naturalistic writings advocating the protection of wild places by notable ecologists in the history of [[conservation biology]], such as [[Aldo Leopold]] and [[Arthur Tansley]], have been seen as far removed from urban centres where, it is claimed, the concentration of pollution and [[environmental degradation]] is located.<ref name="McIntosh85" /><ref name="Palamar08">{{cite journal | last1=Palamar | first1=C. R. | year=2008 | title=The justice of ecological restoration: Environmental history, health, ecology, and justice in the United States | journal=Human Ecology Review | volume=15 | issue=1 | pages=82β94 | url=http://www.humanecologyreview.org/pastissues/her151/palamar.pdf | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110726161950/http://www.humanecologyreview.org/pastissues/her151/palamar.pdf | archive-date=26 July 2011 | access-date=8 August 2012 }}</ref> Palamar (2008)<ref name="Palamar08" /> notes an overshadowing by mainstream environmentalism of pioneering women in the early 1900s who fought for urban health ecology (then called [[euthenics]])<ref name="Hunt" /> and brought about changes in environmental legislation. Women such as [[Ellen Swallow Richards]] and [[Julia Lathrop]], among others, were precursors to the more popularized environmental movements after the 1950s. In 1962, marine biologist and ecologist [[Rachel Carson]]'s book ''[[Silent Spring]]'' helped to mobilize the environmental movement by alerting the public to toxic [[pesticide]]s, such as [[DDT]] (C<sub>14</sub>H<sub>9</sub>Cl<sub>5</sub>), [[Bioaccumulation|bioaccumulating]] in the environment. Carson used ecological science to link the release of environmental toxins to human and [[ecosystem health]]. Since then, ecologists have worked to bridge their understanding of the degradation of the planet's ecosystems with environmental politics, law, restoration, and natural resources management.<ref name="Hammond09" /><ref name="McIntosh85" /><ref name="Palamar08" /><ref name="Krebs99">{{cite journal|last1=Krebs |first1=J. R. |last2=Wilson |first2=J. D. |last3=Bradbury |first3=R. B. |last4=Siriwardena |first4=G. M. |title=The second Silent Spring |journal=Nature |volume=400 |year=1999 |pages=611β612 |doi=10.1038/23127 |url=http://www.hillnet.com/silent_spring.pdf |bibcode=1999Natur.400..611K |issue=6745 |s2cid=9929695 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130331100623/http://www.hillnet.com/silent_spring.pdf |archive-date=31 March 2013}}</ref>
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