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networks that can process data elements whose
instantaneous attributes could assume any of several
conditions, at the same time. Clearly, this concept pushes
the frontiers of database technology beyond today's
capabilities.
Status of Genome Research
If a genetic algorithm template can be created, static data
from past research could be integrated with future data.
All that has been learned about an ecosystem would thus
find service as active digital information. The intent is to
develop a digital library beginning with each species'
genetic attributes and functions, and ending with its
community interactions and environmental responses. The
integration of species libraries would form the larger and
more complex communities and ecosystems in which they
reside, and would allow dynamic data to be inserted and
updated, as needed. At present, the template is crudely
articulated. There are, for example, quantum leaps in
knowledge required to translate genetic base pairs into
their control over physiologic responses...but this is where
the most rapid technology is evolving.
The human genome project was formulated ten years ago.
It was considered an almost impossible job because of its
complexity. ^ Today, this genetic map is nearing
completion, and the race is on to map other species.
Techniques are evolving that apply to whole groups of
related species, eliminating the need to map each one
separately. These maps are becoming commonplace.
More importantly, the networks and functions behind the
genes are gradually being unraveled.
Although research is currently driven by a desire to
understand the human complex, the research community
believes that other forms of life will soon be examined.
By the end of this century, genome research is expected to
migrate toward agricultural and pharmacological species,
as well as to endangered and keystone species.
The digital information that underlies genetic functions is
represented by a simple string of proteins symbolized as
G/A/T/C (guanine, adenine, thymine, cytocine). This
string is the fundamental data structure of any organism's
biology. Because of this commonality, base pairs can be
linked to the physiologic and metabolic functions they
control, and in theory, at least, every species can be
integrated into an ecosystem model through these object
attributes. Once the linkages are mapped, as complicated
as they are, the data structure permits abstraction to higher
levels of system integration.
Status of Ecosystem Research
Carpenter et al. (1995) say that predicting responses of
ecosystems to perturbation is among the greatest
challenges in ecology. Initial research has focused on
biogeochemistry and chemical stressors of ecosystems, but
the scope is expanding to include community dynamics
and ecosystem processes. Most people are familiar with
simple laboratory ecosystems like an aquarium, and many
have learned how hard it is to create a self-adaptive
505
system using only a few species. Nonetheless, these
simple systems provide data that cannot be measured
easily in the field. Time compression and cost savings are
the usual arguments for these models. Time series
experiments that would take generations to complete in the
field can be programmed in the laboratory, and their
results used to develop rule-based systems. Model
systems serve not only as links between levels of
complexity, but also to field experiments containing
environmental noise.
Over the next decade, ecologists expect more research on
model systems, tending toward more complex and realistic
assemblages. Experiments are moving outdoors to
controlled environmental facilities. Results from
experiments on CO,, for example, represent one kind of
research. There is no doubt that rising concentrations of
global CO, will change the abundance and composition of
some plant communities. But, the relationships are not
linear. CO, response is determined by genetic functions
that are influenced by nutrient levels, water supply, and
temperature--all of which are themselves influenced by
changing CO,.
Field experiments using uncontrolled natural conditions
are always subject to question. History shows that one or
two landmark studies can alter paradigms for decades,
only to fade on the strength of another study that refocuses
the research agenda. Complexity is the current focus.
Before data collected using earlier paradigms are lost they
should be integrated into digital libraries.
Landscape Ecology and GIS
Landscape ecology is a relatively young field of research,
but one that is familiar to spatial and spectral analysts. It
is concerned with the spatial dynamics of organisms,
materials, and energy. It promotes models and theories
that focus on spatial heterogeneity and an examination of
data collected at different geographic scales; and, it
recognizes that landscapes are patchworks of natural and
cultural elements interacting to form a new class of
ecosystem based on human supremacy. Figure 1 is a
typical output from this field of inquiry.
Figure 1. Vegetation Cover Over Terrain Model
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXI, Part B7. Vienna 1996