Turchin P V
Dept. Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT 06269-3043, USA.
Zh Obshch Biol. 2002 Jan-Feb;63(1):3-14.
There is a widespread opinion among ecologists that ecology lacks general laws. In this paper the author argues that this opinion is mistaken. Taking the case of population dynamics, the author points out that there are several very general law-like propositions that provide the theoretical basis for most population dynamics models that were developed to address specific issues. Some of these foundational principles, like the law of exponential growth, are logically very similar to certain law of physics (Newton's law of intertia, for example, is almost a direct analogue of exponential growth). The author discusses two other principles (population self-limitation and resource-consumer oscillations), as well as the more elementary postulates that underlie them. None of the "laws" that the author proposes for population ecology are new. Collectively ecologists have been using these general principles in guiding development of their models and experiments since the days of Lotka, Volterra, and Gause.
生态学家中有一种普遍的观点,认为生态学缺乏普遍规律。在本文中,作者认为这种观点是错误的。以种群动态为例,作者指出有几个非常具有普遍性的类规律命题,它们为大多数为解决特定问题而开发的种群动态模型提供了理论基础。其中一些基本原理,如指数增长定律,在逻辑上与某些物理定律非常相似(例如,牛顿惯性定律几乎是指数增长的直接类似物)。作者讨论了另外两个原理(种群自我限制和资源 - 消费者振荡),以及作为它们基础的更基本假设。作者为种群生态学提出的这些“定律”都不是新的。自洛特卡、沃尔泰拉和高斯时代以来,生态学家们一直在共同使用这些一般原理来指导模型和实验的开发。