Article ID: CBB041816680

Population Cycles, Disease, and Networks of Ecological Knowledge (2017)

unapi

Wildlife populations in the northern reaches of the globe have long been observed to fluctuate or cycle periodically, with dramatic increases followed by catastrophic crashes. Focusing on the early work of Charles S. Elton, this article analyzes how investigations into population cycles shaped the development of Anglo-American animal ecology during the 1920s–1930s. Population cycling revealed patterns that challenged ideas about the “balance” of nature; stimulated efforts to quantify population data; and brought animal ecology into conversation with intellectual debates about natural selection. Elton used the problem of understanding wildlife population cycles to explore a central tension in ecological thought: the relative influences of local conditions (food supply, predation) and universal forces (such as climate change and natural selection) in regulating wild animal populations. He also sought patronage and built research practices and the influential Bureau of Animal Population around questions of population regulation during the 1930s. Focusing on disease as a local population regulator that could interact with global climatic influences, Elton facilitated an interdisciplinary and population-based approach in early animal ecology. Elton created a network of epidemiologists, conservationists, pathologists and mathematicians, who contributed to population cycle research. I argue that, although these people often remained peripheral to ecology, their ideas shaped the young discipline. Particularly important were the concepts of abundance, density, and disease; and the interactions between these factors and natural selection. However, Elton’s reliance on density dependence unwittingly helped set up conditions conducive to the development of controversies in animal ecology in later years. While ecologists did not come to consensus on the ultimate causes of population cycles, this phenomenon was an important early catalyst for the development of theory and practice in animal ecology.

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Authors & Contributors
Anderson, Warwick H.
Arrizabalaga, Jon
Baldwin, Melinda Clare
Boivin, Nicole
Chew, Matthew K.
Dehner, George
Journals
History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences
Centaurus: International Magazine of the History of Mathematics, Science, and Technology
Environmental History
Journal of the History of Biology
Agricultural History
Configurations: A Journal of Literature, Science, and Technology
Publishers
Cambridge University Press
Duke University Press
Palgrave Macmillan
Arizona State University
Concepts
Disease ecology
Disease and diseases
Ecology
Epidemiology
Infectious diseases
Colonialism
People
Elton, Charles Sutherland
Burnet, Frank Macfarlane
Smith, Theobald
Fenner, Frank
Grmek, Mirko Drazen
Harant, Hervé
Time Periods
20th century, early
20th century
19th century
20th century, late
17th century
18th century
Places
Great Britain
Australia
United States
Caribbean
India
California (U.S.)
Institutions
Ecological Society of America
Macmillan
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