Ecology: From individuals to collectives: A Physicist’s perspective on ecology

Guttal, Vishwesha (2014) Ecology: From individuals to collectives: A Physicist’s perspective on ecology Resonance - Journal of Science Education, 19 (4). pp. 368-375. ISSN 0971-8044

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12045-014-0041-y

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12045-014-0041-y

Abstract

Common people and even scientists think of ecology as a discipline that exclusively studies wildlife and topics related to environmental pollution. My friends both within and outside the scientific community are often ba2ed when they hear that I am a physicist doing research in ecology. The aim of this series of articles is to emphasize the less known fact that theory and mathematics have been central to ecology since the inception of this relatively young scientific field. In this first article, I will talk about the following three points. First, I will discuss how the emphasis of the basic science of ecology is much broader than its applied aspects involving the conservation of natural ecosystems. Second, I will discuss a fundamental parallel between statistical physics and ecology that arises because both disciplines emphasize macroscopic systems (e.g., magnetic materials in physics or flocks of birds in ecology) as collectives of interacting units that are more than the sum of their constituents. What makes them fascinating is that interactions at small scales typically give rise to unexpected properties at larger scales. Finally, I will discuss how ecology offrs a new and rich set of challenges to mathematically trained scientists because of variations among biological organisms and the role of natural selection in shaping ecological systems, both of which have no parallels in the physical sciences.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Indian Academy of Sciences.
Keywords:Ecology;evolution;conservation;statistical physics;mathematics;mathematical ecology.
ID Code:142706
Deposited On:19 Mar 2026 06:26
Last Modified:19 Mar 2026 06:26

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