By taking all the carbon that we can find out of the ground and pumping it in to the atmosphere, at the same time laying waste to the carbon sponges (forests), the human species makes an excellent case study in ecological succession.
There is no equilibrium in nature, and what ecologists use to call "climax ecosystems," they have decided are nothing more than transitory states. Thus the whole idea of "sustainable society" is more accurately classified as an eco-utopian ideal. The history and future of our species can more realistically be described as a continuous population bloom and die-off based on carrying capacity constraints (just like all the other species, maybe we're not so unique after all?)
The position we're in now is not unique or uncommon. Only impressive because of its global scale. We have been so successful at reproducing and eliminating competitors and usurping their carrying capacity, that we have completely upset the conditions that made us successful to begin with. Classic late stage ecological succession of a dominant species (followed closely by die-off).
We should feel confident in classifying our industrial civilization as one of the most successful failures in biological history.
These ecological principles make up a gaping blind spot in the fractured mindset of the cornucopian. I have yet to see a cornucopian base any of their arguments on biology or ecology. If I can find one, and they can make any sense I will abandon my doomerism at once. I challenge any of the "peakoildebunked" crowd (you know who you are) to make an ecological case as to why we aren't headed towards towards a die-off?








