Des Roches Simone, Brans Kristien I, Lambert Max R, Rivkin L Ruth, Savage Amy Marie, Schell Christopher J, Correa Cristian, De Meester Luc, Diamond Sarah E, Grimm Nancy B, Harris Nyeema C, Govaert Lynn, Hendry Andrew P, Johnson Marc T J, Munshi-South Jason, Palkovacs Eric P, Szulkin Marta, Urban Mark C, Verrelli Brian C, Alberti Marina
Department of Urban Design and Planning University of Washington Seattle WA USA.
Department of Biology Laboratory of Aquatic Ecology, Evolution and Conservation KU Leuven Leuven Belgium.
Evol Appl. 2020 Aug 19;14(1):248-267. doi: 10.1111/eva.13065. eCollection 2021 Jan.
Cities are uniquely complex systems regulated by interactions and feedbacks between nature and human society. Characteristics of human society-including culture, economics, technology and politics-underlie social patterns and activity, creating a heterogeneous environment that can influence and be influenced by both ecological and evolutionary processes. Increasing research on urban ecology and evolutionary biology has coincided with growing interest in eco-evolutionary dynamics, which encompasses the interactions and reciprocal feedbacks between evolution and ecology. Research on both urban evolutionary biology and eco-evolutionary dynamics frequently focuses on contemporary evolution of species that have potentially substantial ecological-and even social-significance. Still, little work fully integrates urban evolutionary biology and eco-evolutionary dynamics, and rarely do researchers in either of these fields fully consider the role of human social patterns and processes. Because cities are fundamentally regulated by human activities, are inherently interconnected and are frequently undergoing social and economic transformation, they represent an opportunity for ecologists and evolutionary biologists to study urban "socio-eco-evolutionary dynamics." Through this new framework, we encourage researchers of urban ecology and evolution to fully integrate human social drivers and feedbacks to increase understanding and conservation of ecosystems, their functions and their contributions to people within and outside cities.
城市是独特的复杂系统,由自然与人类社会之间的相互作用和反馈所调节。人类社会的特征——包括文化、经济、技术和政治——构成了社会模式和活动的基础,创造了一个异质性环境,该环境既能影响生态和进化过程,又会受到这些过程的影响。对城市生态学和进化生物学的研究日益增多,这与人们对生态进化动力学的兴趣不断增长相契合,生态进化动力学涵盖了进化与生态之间的相互作用和相互反馈。城市进化生物学和生态进化动力学的研究通常都聚焦于具有潜在重大生态甚至社会意义的物种的当代进化。然而,将城市进化生物学和生态进化动力学充分整合的工作仍然很少,而且这两个领域的研究人员很少充分考虑人类社会模式和过程的作用。由于城市本质上受人类活动调节,具有内在的相互联系,且经常经历社会和经济转型,它们为生态学家和进化生物学家提供了一个研究城市“社会 - 生态 - 进化动力学”的机会。通过这个新框架,我们鼓励城市生态学和进化领域的研究人员充分整合人类社会驱动因素和反馈,以增进对生态系统及其功能以及它们对城市内外人群贡献的理解和保护。