C. S. Holling
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C. S. (Buzz) Holling is a retired Canadian ecologist. Holling is Emeritus Eminent Scholar and Professor in Ecological Sciences at the University of Florida. His early work included major contributions to population and behavioural ecology. Later, he was among the first ecologists to recognize the importance of nonlinear dynamics. His 1973 paper on the resilience of ecological systems had a substantial impact within ecology and other natural and social sciences. He has also contributed important ideas to ecological management, including Adaptive management and the [Adaptive Cycle]. More recently his work on the cross-scale structure and dynamics of ecosystems has been highly influential. This work resulted in the 2002 book Panarchy: understanding transformations in human and natural systems.
Crawford Stanley Holling was born in 1930 in the United States to Canadian parents. He grew up in Northern Ontario in Canada, which was where he first became interested in nature. As a teenager he was a member of the Royal Ontario Museum’s Toronto Junior Field Naturalists.
Holling received his B.A. and M.Sc. at the University of Toronto (1952) and his Ph.D. at the University of British Columbia (1957). He worked for several years in the Canadian Department of Forestry in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario. His early work on predation led to a series of papers, including his 1959 Citation Classic paper in the Canadian Entomologist, in which he developed the notion of functional response, an idea that continues to be a linchpin of modern population ecology. After working for Forestry Canada, Buzz Holling was, at various times, Professor and Director of the Institute of Resource Ecology, University of British Columbia, Director of the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) in Vienna, and Eminent Scholar, Arthur R. Marshall Jr. Chair in Ecological Sciences in the Department of Zoology at the University of Florida. He retired from the University of Florida in 1999, but remains on the faculty as an Emeritus Eminent Scholar.
He has been awarded two major awards from the Ecological Society of America, the Mercer Award given to a young scientist in recognition of an outstanding paper in ecology (in 1966), and the Eminent Ecologist Award for "outstanding contributions to the science of Ecology" in 1999. He also received the Kenneth Boulding Memorial Prize, International Society for Ecological Economics (2000), and an Honorary Doctor of Science from the University of Guelph (1998). He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, a foreign Fellow of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, and has been awarded the Austrian Cross of Honour for Arts and Science.
He was founding editor-in-chief of the open access on-line journal Conservation Ecology, now renamed Ecology and Science ([1]). He was also the founder of the Resilience Alliance, an international science network.
Throughout his research, C. S. Holling has blended systems theory and ecology with simulation modeling and policy analysis to develop integrative theories of change that have practical utility. He has introduced important ideas in the application of ecology and evolution, including resilience, adaptive management, the adaptive cycle, and panarchy.
His work is frequently cited in the field of ecology, environmental management, ecological economics and the human dimensions of global change.
C.S. Holling's most cited articles include:
- Holling, C. S. (1959a). "The components of predation as revealed by a study of small mammal predation of the European Pine Sawfly". Canadian Entomologist. 91:293-320.
- Holling, C. S. (1973). "Resilience and stability of ecological systems". Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics. 4:1-23.
- Ludwig D., Jones D. D., & Holling C. S. (1978). "Qualitative analysis of insect outbreak systems". Journal of animal ecology. 47 (1): 315-332.
- Walters, C. J. & Holling C. S. (1990). "Large-scale management experiments and learning by doing". Ecology. 71 (6): 2060-2068
- Holling C. S. (1992). "Cross-scale Morphology, geometry, and dynamics of ecosystems". Ecological Monographs. 62 (4): 447-502
- Holling C. S. & Meffe G. K. (1996). "Command and control and the pathology of natural resource management". Conservation Biology 10 (2): 328-337.
[edit] Books
- Holling, C. S, editor. (1978). Adaptive environmental assessment and management. London, John Wiley & Sons.
- Gunderson, L., Holling, C. S. & Light, S, editors. (1995). Barriers and bridges to the renewal of ecosystems and institutions. New York, Columbia University Press.
- Gunderson, L. & Holling, C. S., editors. (2002). Panarchy: understanding transformations in human and natural systems. Washington, DC, Island Press.