Hi Juan and Dr. McNeely, 

Thanks Juan for the reference. I'll have a look at it in the near future. 
Thanks also to Dr. McNeely for the comments and precisions. 

I did not mean to suggest that we should manipulate ecosystems without caution. 
I was more interested in the definition of ecological dysfunction, or in the 
words of Dr. McNeely, of something being unfavorable to an ecosystem; in 
relation to the analogy between functions of organs in organisms and those of 
processes in ecosystems. In the case of the organ-organism relation, it makes 
sense to say that some organs is diseased or malfunctioning. I was wondering if 
such thing could be said about ecosystem processes in more than a metaphorical 
or subjective way. I would think that it can, but I'm just a student and I read 
many ecologists arguing that such assertions are too value-laden to be 
scientific. 

One approach is to invoke ecosystem services and to state that ecosystems are 
dysfunctional when they stop providing the services that we need. However, this 
makes the analogy with organisms imperfect, because, arguably, in the case of 
organisms, the judgment that an organ is malfunctioning is an objective 
judgment independent of any subjective interests (e.g. one can judge that the 
liver of an wild animal is sick even if she does not care about what she could 
possibly gain from this wild animal). So, I was wondering if something similar 
could be formulated about ecosystems: a norm of function and dysfunction which 
is objective and scientific, and so is independent of our desires and 
interests. 

Hope my questions make sense...

Antoine
                                          

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