no
I would invert the order of the two words and use, in preference, the term ecological-economic rather economic ecological, but I see the term as a very useful and indeed vital, one.Something makes ecological-economic sense when it is concurrently consistent with the normal logic developed in standard economics (efficient allocation of resources to meet human needs with minimum waste), and also, meets human needs without doing any lasting damage to the major natural ecosystems of planet Earth. Functional natural ecosystems, are, fundamentally, essential to human life as much as to the viability of all living species, and are therefore a pre-condition of an enduring economic system.So rather than pursuing the vague objective of "balancing" ecological integrity and "economic benefit", we can instead pursue the better-defined aim of maximizing cumulative ecological-economic benefit. In effect, we aim to maximize human well-being subject to a strictly-observed ecological-integrity constraint. Where a projected "economic benefit" would transgress the ecological integrity constraint, it is in effect, uneconomic in the ecological-economic sense.
Human Pathogen
An ecological footprint is a measure of human demand on Earth's ecosystem. An example sentence would be: She recycles because she wants her ecological footprint to be small.
The word ecological means something described by the interdependence of organisms in an environmental setting. The term ecological is often used in biology and environmental science classes.
The ecological term "Biocenose".
population growth, human activities, resources aviability and climatic factors distrupts the ecological balance.
ecosystem
"Ecological resource" means a source or supply of ecological importance from which benefit is produced and required by living organisms for sustainable normal coexistence of nature and human well-being.
yes
Ecosystem is a shorthand term for ecological system.
decomposer