Tonight is
the Chinese Lunar Festival. Downtown in San Francisco's Chinatown,
immigrants are exchanging moon cakes and telling tales of the Ghost
Maiden who escaped as an orb in the sky. Twelve miles away where I live,
I can walk in a cloud. The fog of the Golden Gate has piled up along the
steep bank behind our house, engulfing our neighborhood in vapor. Under
the light of Lady Moon, I take a midnight hike.
I wade chest-high in bleached ryegrass murmuring in the wind, and spy
down the rugged coast of California. It is a disruptive land. For most
purposes it is a mountainous desert that meets a generous ocean which
cannot provide rain. Instead the sea sneaks in the water of life by
rolling out blankets of fog at night. Come morning, the mist condenses
into drops on the edges of twig and leaf, which tinkle to the earth.
Much water is transported this way over a summer, bypassing the monopoly
thunderclouds have on water delivery elsewhere. On this stingy
substitute rain, the behemoth of all living things, the redwood,
thrives.
The advantage of rain is that it is massive and indiscriminate. When it
rains, it will wet a wide, diverse constituency. Fog on the other hand,
is local. It relies on low-powered convection currents to ramble
wherever it is easiest to drift to, and is then trapped by gentle,
patient cul-de-sacs in the hills. In this way, the shape of the land
steers the water, and indirectly, life. The correctly shaped hill can
catch fog, or funnel drip into a canyon. A sunny south-facing mound will
lose more precious moisture to evaporation than a shadier northern
slope. Certain outcroppings of soil retain water better than others.
Play these variables on top of each other and you have a patchwork of
habitats. In a desert land, water decides life. And in a desert land
where water is not delivered democratically, but parochially, on a whim,
the land itself decides life.
The result is a patchwork landscape. The hills behind my house are
cloaked with three separate quilts. A community of low-lying grass -- and
of mice, owl, thistle, and poppy -- runs to the sea on one slope. On the
crest of the hill, gnarly juniper and cypress trees preside over a
separate association of deer, fox, and lichen. And on the other side of
the rise, an endless impenetrable thicket of poison oak and coyote brush
hides quail and other members of its guild.
The balance of these federations is kinetic. Their mutual
self-supporting pose is continuously almost-falling, like a standing
wave in a spring creek. When the mass of nature's creatures push against
each other in coevolutionary embrace, their interactions among the
uneven terrain of land and weather breaks their aggregate into local
enclaves of codependency. And these patches roam over the land in
time.
Wind and spring floods erode soils, exposing underlying layers and
premiering new compositions of humus and minerals on the surface. As the
mix of soil churns on the land, the mix of plants and animals coupled to
it likewise churn. A thick stand of cactus, such as a Saguaro forest,
can migrate onto or off of a patch of southwestern desert in little as
100 years. In a time-lapse film, a Saguaro grove would seem to creep
across the desertscape like a pool of mercury. And it's not just cactus
that would roam. Under the same time-lapse view, the wildflower prairie
savanna of the midwest would flow around stands of oaks like an incoming
tide, sometimes dissolving the woods into prairie, and sometimes, if the
wildfires died out, retreating from the spreading swell of oak groves.
Ecologist Dan Botkin speaks of forests "marching slowly across the
landscape to the beat of the changing climate."
"Without change,
deserts deteriorate," claims Tony Burgess, a burly ecologist with a huge
red beard. Burgess is in love with deserts. He inhales desert lore and
data all his waking hours. Out in the stark sun near Tucson, Arizona, he
has been monitoring a desert plot that several generations of scientists
have continuously measured and photographed for 80 years; the plot is
the longest uninterrupted ecological observation anywhere. From studying
the data of 80 years of desert change, Burgess has concluded that
"variable rainfall is the key to the desert. Every year it should be a
slightly different ball game to keep every species slightly out of
equilibrium. If rainfall is variant then the mixture of species
increases by two or three orders of magnitude. Whereas if you have a
constant schedule of rainfall with respect to the annual temperature
cycle, the beautiful desert ecology will almost always collapse into
something simpler."
"Equilibrium is dead," Burgess states matter-of-factly. This opinion has
not been held very long by the ecological science community. "Until the
mid-1970s we were all working under a legacy which said that communities
are on a trajectory towards an unchanging equilibrium, the climax. But
now we see that it is turbulence and variance that really gives the
richness to nature."
A major reason why ecologists favored equilibrium end points in nature
was exactly the same reason why economists favored equilibrium end
points in the economy: the mathematics of equilibria were possible. You
could write an equation for a process that you could actually solve. But
if you said that the system was perpetually in disequilibrium, you were
saying it followed a model you couldn't solve and therefore couldn't
explore. You were saying almost nothing. It is no coincidence,
therefore, that a major shift in ecological (and economic) understanding
occurred in the era when cheap computers made nonequilibrial and
nonlinear equations easy to program. It was suddenly no problem to model
a chaotic, coevolutionary ecosystem on a personal computer, and see
that, hey, it acts very much like the odd behavior of a Saguaro forest
or a prairie savanna on the march.
A thousand varieties of nonequilibrial models have blossomed in recent
years; in fact there is now a small cottage industry of makers of
chaotic and nonlinear mathematics, differential equations, and
complexity theory, all this activity lending a hand in overturning the
notion that nature or an economy seeks a stable balance. This new
perspective -- that a certain unremitting flux is the norm -- has illuminated
past data for reinterpretation. Burgess can display old photographs of
the desert that show in a relatively short time -- over a few
decades -- patches of Saguaro drifting over the Tucson basin. "What we
found from our desert plot," Burgess said, "is that these patches are
not in sync in terms of development and that by not being in sync, they
make the whole desert richer because if something catastrophic wipes out
one patch, another patch at a different stage of its natural history can
export organisms and seeds to the decimated patch. Even ecosystems, such
as tropical rain forests, which don't have variable rainfall, also have
patch dynamics due to periodic storms and tree falls."
"Equilibrium is not only dead, it is death," Burgess emphasizes. "To
enrich a system you need variance in time and space. But too much change
will kill you too. You go from an ecocline to ecotone."
Burgess finds nature's reliance on disturbances and variance to be a
practical issue. "In nature, it is no problem if you have very erratic
production [of vegetation, seeds, or meat] from year to year. Nature
actually increases her richness from this variance. But when people try
to sustain themselves on the production from an ecosystem like a desert
that is so variance driven, they can only do it by simplifying the
system into what we call agriculture -- which gives a constant production
for a variable environment." Burgess hopes the flux of the desert can
teach us how to live with a variable environment without simplifying it.
It is not a completely foolish dream. Part of what an information-driven
economy provides us with is an adaptable infrastructure that can bend
and work around irregular production; this is the basis for flexible and
"just-in-time" manufacturing. It is theoretically possible that we could
use information networks to coordinate the investment and highly
irregular output of a rich, fluxing ecosystem that provides food and
organic resources. But, as Burgess admits, "At the moment we have no
industrial economic models that are variance driven, except
gambling."
continue...
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