21st century challenges ranging from global warming to
pollution of the earth's ecosystems all have one thing in common: a linkage of social and natural ecological
systems with human activity creating ecosystem complexity by linking social and
natural systems. The Sugar Creek
Project, in which Ben Stinner participated, is an attempt to find new
principles to integrate the ecological, social and economic aspects of
agricultural systems.
The research is based on a reconsideration of the position
of the researcher so that synergy between farmers and researchers occurs in
such a way that farmers and researchers can work together to link hierarchical
scales of analysis at the field, farm, community, and watershed levels. One of the most significant findings was
that the moral values of stewardship and social responsibility of the farmers
led the researchers into a new methodology, namely to use a year-round high
density sampling approach to examine the water quality of headwater streams.
Comparing the headwater streams of Amish and German descent
residents, we found fragmented landscapes resulting from an interaction of
social organization, ethnicity, and belief systems. An unexpected result was a measurable increase in social capital
and social complexity related to social self-organization as biodiversity
increased.