4.6 Article

Socio-eco-evolutionary dynamics in cities

Journal

EVOLUTIONARY APPLICATIONS
Volume 14, Issue 1, Pages 248-267

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/eva.13065

Keywords

adaptation; anthropogenic; coupled human-natural systems; eco-evo; socio-ecological systems; urbanization

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [RCN 1840663]

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Cities are complex systems regulated by interactions between nature and human society. Characteristics of human society create a heterogeneous environment that influences and is influenced by ecological and evolutionary processes. Urban ecology and evolutionary biology research focuses on contemporary evolution of species with ecological and social significance, but rarely fully integrate human social patterns and processes.
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.

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