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Robert Ulanowicz
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Robert Edward Ulanowicz ( ) is an American theoretical ecologist and of descent who in his search for a unified theory of ecology has formulated a paradigm he calls Process Ecology."Who's Who in Polish America" 1st Edition 1996-1997, Boleslaw Wierzbianski editor; Bicentennial Publishing Corporation, New York, NY, 1996. He was born September 17, 1943, in , Maryland.

He served as professor of theoretical ecology at the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science's Chesapeake Biological Laboratory in Solomons, Maryland, until his retirement in 2008. Ulanowicz received both his BS and PhD in chemical engineering from Johns Hopkins University in 1964 and 1968, respectively.

Ulanowicz currently resides in Gainesville, Florida, where he holds a courtesy professorship in the Department of Biology at the University of Florida. Since relocating to Florida, Ulanowicz has served as a scientific advisor to the Howard T. Odum Florida Springs Institute, an organization dedicated to the preservation and welfare of Florida's natural springs.


Overview
Ulanowicz uses techniques from information theory and to study the organization of flows of energy and nutrients within ecosystems. Although his ideas have been primarily applied in ecology, many of his concepts are abstract and have been applied to other areas in which arise, such as and .

Though Ulanowicz began his career modeling ecological systems using differential equations, he soon reached the limits of this approach.Mann, K.H., T.C. Platt and R.E Ulanowicz, (eds) 1981, Mathematical Models in Biological Oceanography, UNESCO Monographs on Oceanographic Methodology, 7 UNESCO Press, Paris, 157 p. Realizing that any ecosystem is a , he decided to move away from what he saw as the inappropriate use of the approach, and instead began to work towards development of theoretical measures of the ecosystem as a whole, such as . Gradually, he came to appreciate the ecosystem behavior is not simply a matter of "mechanics with noise," but rather an intricate interplay between opposing tendencies—autocatalytic-like self-organization and entropic decay. This natural conversation could be followed quantitatively using information-theoretic measures applied to networks of trophic processes.

Following , Ulanowicz points out how ecology differs significantly from in that constraints that are absent play important roles in ecosystem dynamics. He also argues how the homogeneous laws of physics only constrain the behavior of very heterogeneous ecosystems but are incapable by themselves of determining outcomes. He goes so far as to suggest that an entirely new metaphysics, which he calls Process Ecology, is required to understand complex living systems.Ulanowicz, Robert E. "Process Ecology: Making Room for Creation." Sophia (2016): 1-24.

One pertinent discovery by Ulanowicz was that ecosystems do not progress to maximum efficiency. Ecosystems that channel too much activity along the most efficient pathways do so at the expense of redundant, less-efficient processes that can function to take over vital activities in the event that the more efficient processes are disrupted. Ecosystems that persist are those that achieve a balance between the mutually exclusive attributes of efficiency and reliability.Ulanowicz, R.E. 2009. "The dual nature of ecosystem dynamics Ecological Modelling 220: 1886-1892. This result from nature poses a significant challenge to mainstream economics, wherein market efficiency is held to be the sine qua non.Goerner, S.J., Lietaer, B., and Ulanowicz, R.E. 2009. "Quantifying economic sustainability: Implications for free-enterprise theory, policy, and practice." Ecological Economics 69:76-81.


Publications
Ulanowicz has authored or co-authored over two hundred articles in theoretical ecology and related areas of philosophy, especially those dealing with and . He has authored three books to date. Profile: A Scientist for All Seasons Chesapeake Quarterly, Vol. 4, No. 3

  • A Third Window: Natural Life Beyond Newton and Darwin, Templeton Foundation Press (2009) ()--A description of Ulanowicz's new metaphysics
  • Ecology: The Ascendant Perspective, Columbia University Press (1997) () - Causality in living systems, written for a more general audience
  • Growth and Development - Ecosystems phenomenology, Springer (1986) () - A more technical exposition of Ulanowicz's early ideas


Palms
While living in Maryland, Ulanowicz took up a hobby of cultivating and casually breeding cold-hardy palm trees; he drew attention for a on Solomons Island that grew taller than the one-story building it was planted outside. Erica Mitrano, "Palm gracing Solomons conjures a tropical breeze", Southern Maryland Newspapers Online, Oct. 25, 2006.


Awards
Ulanowicz was named the recipient of the 2007 Medal for outstanding research in ecological systems. ECOSUD 2007: Sixth International Conference on Ecosystems and Sustainable Development He participated in the Stock Exchange of Visions project in 2007.

Ulanowicz was a featured speaker at the 2009 Ill STOQ International Conference entitled "Biological Evolution: Facts and Theories," which discussed the impacts and effects of the publication of On the Origin of Species by .


See also


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