Abstract
Human populations have grown to such an extent that our species has become a dominant force on the planet, prompting geologists to begin applying the term Anthropocene to recognize the present moment. Many approaches seek to explain the past and future of human population growth, in the form of narratives and models. Some of the most influential models have parameters that cannot be precisely known but are estimated by expert opinion. Here we apply a unified model of ecology to provide a macroscale summary of the net effects of many microscale processes, using a minimal set of parameters that can be known. Our models match estimates of historic and prehistoric global human population numbers and provide predictions that correspond to some of the more complicated current models. In addition to fitting the data well they reveal that, amidst enormous complexity in our human and prehuman past, three key ecological discontinuities have occurred in turn: 1) becoming dominant competitors of large predators rather than their prey, 2) becoming mutualists with food species rather than acting as predators upon them, and 3) changing from a regime of uncontrolled population growth to one of controlled fertility instead. All three processes have been interlinked with cultural evolution and all three ushered in developments of the Anthropocene. Understanding the trajectories that have delivered us to this stage can help guide prudent paths into the future.
Highlights
Human populations have grown to such an extent that our species has become a dominant force on the planet, prompting geologists to begin applying the term Anthropocene to recognize the present moment
More than 30 y after Pearl [8], von Foerster et al [10] fitted human population estimates for the past two millennia without the constraining assumptions of a carrying capacity and found they fitted a kind of hyperbolic equation that kept doubling at ever increasing rates
Whether the official beginning of the Anthropocene is marked by incipient agriculture or the nuclear era, changes leading to it were driven by cultural and ecological interactions that are evident in basic multispecies equations of population growth
Summary
Human populations have grown to such an extent that our species has become a dominant force on the planet, prompting geologists to begin applying the term Anthropocene to recognize the present moment. Some groups working with detailed census data do not attempt to formulate a general model for projecting populations, but Recent times have been called the Anthropocene [1, 2] to acknowledge a profound human signature on the planet.
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