History's legacy: Why future progress in ecology demands a view of the past

Ecology. 2022 Nov;103(11):e3788. doi: 10.1002/ecy.3788. Epub 2022 Jul 25.

Abstract

History has profoundly affected the composition, distribution, and abundances of species in contemporary ecosystems. A full understanding of how ecosystems work and change must therefore take history into account. We offer four well-studied examples illustrating how a knowledge of history has strengthened interpretations of modern systems: the development of molluscan antipredatory defenses in relation to shell-breaking predators; the North Pacific kelp ecosystem with sea otters, smaller predators, sea urchins, and large herbivores; estuarine ecosystems affected by the decline in oysters and other suspension feeders; and the legacy of extinct large herbivores and frugivores in tropical American forests. Many current ecological problems would greatly benefit from a historical perspective. We highlight four of these: soil depletion and tree stunting in forests related to the disappearance of large consumers; the spread of anoxic dead zones in the ocean, which we argue could be mitigated by restoring predator and suspension-feeding guilds; ocean acidification, which would be alleviated by more nutrient recycling by consumers in the aerobic ecosystem; and the relation between species diversity and keystone predators, a foundational concept that is complicated by simplified trophic relationships in modern ecosystems.

Keywords: North Pacific; acidification; dead zones; diversity; escalation; evolution; extinction; feedbacks; history; tropical forests.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Ecology* / methods
  • Ecology* / standards
  • Ecosystem*
  • Food Chain
  • Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
  • Kelp
  • Otters
  • Seawater