4.6 Article

Levels of organization in biology: on the nature and nomenclature of ecology's fourth level

Journal

BIOLOGICAL REVIEWS
Volume 83, Issue 1, Pages 71-78

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-185X.2007.00032.x

Keywords

ecoscape; landscape; ecosystem; ecological system; spatial ecology; hierarchy theory; community ecology; emergent properties; holism; spatial and temporal scales

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Viewing the universe as being composed of hierarchically arranged systems is widely accepted as a useful model of reality. In ecology, three levels of organization are generally recognized: organisms, populations, and communities (biocoenoses). For half a century increasing numbers of ecologists have concluded that recognition of a fourth level would facilitate increased understanding of ecological phenomena. Sometimes the word ecosystem is used for this level, but this is arguably inappropriate. Since 1986, I and others have argued that the term landscape would be a suitable term for a level of organization defined as an ecological system containing more than one community type. However, landscape and landscape level continue to be used extensively by ecologists in the popular sense of a large expanse of space. I therefore now propose that the term ecoscape be used instead for this fourth level of organization. A clearly defined fourth level for ecology would focus attention on the emergent properties of this level, and maintain the spatial and temporal scale-free nature inherent in this hierarchy of organizational levels for living entities.

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