Title of article
Limitations of controlled experimental systems as models for natural systems: a conceptual assessment of experimental practices in biogeochemistry and soil science
Author/Authors
Daniel Haag ، نويسنده , , Gunda Matschonat، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages
18
From page
199
To page
216
Abstract
Experimental systems in which phenomena are studied under controlled conditions allow scientists to infer causal
relationships from observable effects. When investigating ecosystems, however, scientists face complex systems. The
conventional approach is to divide the system into conceptual units and to prepare experimental systems accordingly.
Experimental systems are used as models for ecosystems: initially, scientists assume an analogy between the
experimental system and ecosystem, then encode the experimental system into a formal system by measuring
variables, and decode statements from the formal system to the ecosystem. We distinguish three types of experimental
systems, i.e. laboratory, container and field set-ups, further divided into seven subtypes. Starting from the
premises of experimental systems, we comment on the possibilities and limitations of experimentally derived causal
relationships and on their significance for ecosystem understanding and prediction, illustrated by examples from soil
science and the environmental sciences. Experimental set-ups have a characteristic duration, degree of structural
integrity, internal variability and boundaries, which relate to conceptual closure and experimental control: control
tends to be maximum on short time scales, in homogeneous set-ups with analytical boundaries, and in systems with
few parameters to be observed. Complexity is increased at the expense of control. The higher the degree of
manipulation, however, the better is reproducibility, but the larger is the deviation from unique ecosystems with their
infinite number of factors. The material realization of closed systems is preceded by a conceptual closure of the
system. Closure is relative to the domain of phenomena of interest, the theory and the list of variables selected by the
scientist. Successful decoding from experimental systems to ecosystems largely depends on the validity of the chosen
analogy. Laboratory systems are idealized systems which contain a limited number of a priori defined variables, and
which are shielded from environmental influences. In contrast, ecosystems are materially and conceptually open,non-stationary, historical systems, in which system-level properties can emerge, and in which variables are produced
internally. We conclude that when conducting experiments, causal factors can be identified, but that causal
knowledge derived from insufficiently closed systems is invalid. In ecosystems, innumerous factors interact, which
may enhance, reduce or neutralize the effect of an experimentally determined factor. Thus, experimental model
systems need to be evaluated for concrete, well-defined ecosystems with a concrete history. Increasingly detailed
studies of isolated phenomena in the laboratory will probably not contribute much to ecosystem-level understanding.
When conducting experiments, scientists should aim at the maximum degree of complexity they can actually handle
and they should justify the chosen analogy.
Keywords
self-organization , philosophy of science , Ecosystem , scale , models , EXPERIMENTS
Journal title
Science of the Total Environment
Serial Year
2001
Journal title
Science of the Total Environment
Record number
982718
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