Ekological Engineering
Ekological Engineering
Ekological Engineering
Environmental Engineering Sciences, P.O. Box 116450, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611-6450, USA
b 2160 N.W. 9th Ave., Gainesville, FL 32603, USA
Received 14 June 2002; accepted 4 August 2003
Abstract
Ecological engineering was defined as the practice of joining the economy of society to the environment symbiotically by
fitting technological design with ecological self design. The boundary of ecological engineering systems includes the ecosystems
that self organize to fit with technology, whereas environmental engineering designs normally stop at the end of the pipe. For
example, the coastal marsh wildlife sanctuary at Port Aransas, Texas, developed when municipal wastewaters were released
on bare sands. The energy hierarchy concept provides principles for planning spatial and temporal organization that can be
sustained. Techniques of ecological engineering are given with examples that include maintaining biodiversity with multiple
seeding, experimental mesocosms, enclosed systems with people like Biosphere 2, wetland filtration of heavy metals, overgrowth
and climax ecosystems, longitudinal succession, exotics, domestication of ecosystems, closing material cycles, and controlling
water with vegetation reflectance.
2003 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords: Ecological engineering; Waste recycle; Self organization; Energy hierarchy; Emergy; Transformity; Emdollars; Maximum power
1. Introduction
1.1. Definitions
Corresponding author.
0925-8574/$ see front matter 2003 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
doi:10.1016/j.ecoleng.2003.08.008
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Fig. 1. Scale of ecological engineering, a larger realm than traditional environmental engineering. (a) Sketch of the unified system of
environment and technology sometimes used as a logo for ecological engineering; (b) traditional boundary of environmental engineering
designing; and (c) boundary of ecological engineering designing.
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Fig. 2. The Audubon marshes at Port Aransas, Texas, an example of ecological engineering use of self organization. (a) Map view; and
(b) view from tower.
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Fig. 3. Summary of the concept of energy hierarchy and the relationships with increasing scale. (a) Network aggregated as an energy
transformation chain; (b) size of centers and their territories; (c) quantity stored and turnover time; (d) period of pulses and time between
pulses; (e) rate of materials flow to centers; (f) pattern of money circulation; and (g) concentration of money circulation and prices.
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In mitigation, developments are allowed in environmentally valuable areas if equivalent environmental protection is added to comparable areas elsewhere.
Emergyemdollar evaluation is the appropriate way to
compare systems which need both environmental and
economic inputs to be evaluated on a common basis.
In Florida, wetlands mitigation is still done without a
quantitative scientific basis, although emergy emdollars have been much discussed.
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Fig. 4. Microcosms used for testing impacts on ecosystems. (a) Terrestrial microcosms started with rainforest soil, litter, and herbs and
metabolism measured from diurnal variation of carbon dioxide. (b) Microcosm simulating the circulating animal reef-plankton ecosystem
of South Texas, with metabolism indicated by diurnal variation in dissolved oxygen.
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The microcosms were also seen as a way to anticipate ecological engineering designs that might follow
if implemented on a larger scale. For example, the oyster reef mesocosms were able to duplicate the main
features of the estuarine ecosystem and its response to
added nutrient water (Fig. 4b). At a smaller scale than
in nature, all the properties of size and time were to
the left in Fig. 3. After extensive use of small microcosms, they were criticized as not able to show what
was of importance on the large scale. The big animals
and large scale pulses were absent. However, the results from microcosms can be multiplied by scale factors (turnover time, territory, and transformity) to infer
the equivalent at the larger scale. More efforts were
made to experiment with larger mesocosms, although
the costs were greater. The book of papers edited by
Gardner et al. (2001) compares properties of ecosystem with scale, including many new graphs that illustrate the energy hierarchy.
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Fig. 5. Concept of enclosed ecosystem with multiple species to support people adopted in Biosphere 2. (a) Concept published in 1971;
(b) view of Biosphere 2; and (c) floor plan of Biosphere 2.
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Fig. 6. Biosphere 2 and its metabolism and diversity in Biosphere 2. (a) Cross section view; (b) nearly balanced production and consumption
after 2 years of self organization; and (c) diversity of plants after 7 years.
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Fig. 7. Comparison of marsh productivity in marshes receiving municipal treated wastewaters at Morehead City, NC, compared with control
marshes (Marshall, 1970).
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Fig. 8. Sites where self-organized wetland ecosystems were able to sequester large quantities of lead and zinc. (a) Biala River marshes of
Poland; and (b) Sapp swamp in Florida.
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Fig. 9. Experimental and control ponds used to test self organization of an estuarine interface ecosystem adapted to municipal
wastewaters. (a) Locations; (b) waste receiving ponds; and (c)
control ponds.
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Fig. 10. Annual record of metabolism of estuarine ponds determined from the diurnal variation of dissolved oxygen.
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Fig. 11. An improved plan for using self organization of longitudinal succession for restoration of Everglades. Annual contribution of each
area is given in emdollars.
to agriculture and urban development. At times, excesses are wasted by pumping east and west into the
sea. The restoration is intended to return more water
to Everglades and Everglades National Park. Fig. 11
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Fig. 12. Spectra of solar energy reflectance of cypress species in Florida, mean graphs with 95% confidence interval. (a) Faster growing
bald cypress; and (b) water-saving pond cypress (McClanahan and Odum, 1991).
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Fig. 13. Alternatives for pulppaper mill interfaces with environment in the Fenholloway River watershed of Perry, Florida.
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Fig. 14. Example of ecological engineering with exotics, the self organization of Spartina anglica colonizing mud flats in New Zealand.
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Using exotics is controversial. Many organismicoriented scientists think of exotics as the cause of
ecosystem change, rather than as natures appropriate response to new conditions. In continental areas of
the world with large gene pools and without changed
conditions, adding an exotic usually enriches its gene
pool without much effect.
However, when the new situation has excess resources, there is low diversity overgrowth by the
exotic. The energy corollary 4 (above) explains why
attempts to remove such exotics are futile as long as
there are inputs of excess resources. With new exotic
plants, its normal animal and microbial associates
and control agents may be missing. Consequently,
the vegetation may be monolithic, and typical sequences of succession absent. In time, the system
improves when controlling organisms are introduced
or when complexity is developed with other self
organization.
However, on isolated islands like Hawaii, only a
few species were introduced over thousands of years
before the development of the global economy. Consequently, these few species evolved as generalists
able to occupy the many habitats, but not specialized
for any one. Introducing more specialized mainland species to these islands displaces the native
generalists, causing many extinctions. Costly efforts
are required to preserve the original species in reserves in which exotics are removed as fast as they
come in.
After multiple seeding of new situations, ecological
engineering of interfaces will often find exotics dom-
inant and useful in the cooperating ecosystems. However, ecological engineers should be legal, play safe,
and avoid controversial publicity, by never importing
exotics from another area.
4.17. Mud flat colonizing by exotic Spartina anglica
In temperate latitudes all over the world, the
saltmarsh grass Spartina anglica is colonizing the
areas of bare mud-flats. Fig. 14 shows the spread
of the exotic grass at Havelock, New Zealand. Our
studies there showed much increased productivity,
increased nursery role for fishes and marsh birds, but
a loss of habitat for sandpipers and shore birds (Knox
et al., 2002; Odum et al., 1983). It fits the principle
of self organization for maximum productivity. But
why did not the earth spread or evolve better adapted
plants in millions of years of ecosystem evolution
earlier? The much feared role of global transportation
and trade spreading exotics may actually be one of
humanitys beneficial contributions by increasing the
empower of the earth.
In western United States and New Zealand, the
Spartina anglica invasion is regarded as bad, and
efforts are made to kill the plants, but colonization is welcomed for its productivity and coastal
protection in China. It is used to pasture horses in
Wales.
Spartina anglica and the east coast Spartina alterniflora are both exotics on the west coast (California,
Oregon, and Washington), the subject of the Washington Sea Grant program (Aberle, 1990)
Fig. 15. Example of large scale ecological engineering, the coupling of the urban center of San Juan, Puerto Rico, with Luquillo Mountain
Rainforests, a geobiological center.
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Fig. 16. Energy systems summary of ecological engineering interface of technology and ecosystems given at an ecological engineering
workshop at the National Academy of Science.
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5. Summary
This introduction defined ecological engineering,
stated energy principles that guide the self-organizing
design of interface ecosystems, and suggests practical techniques with examples. Fig. 16 summarizes
the interface of technology and ecosystems and the
main pathways that interact to increase performance.
Emergy, transformity, and emdollars are useful measures for evaluating the best alternatives. Some ecological engineering techniques are summarized in Table 1.
Acknowledgements
These comments introduced the first meeting of the
American Ecological Engineering Society in Athens,
Georgia, in April, 2001. Illustrations are from a book
manuscript Environment Power and Society, second
edition.
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