An ecosystem is generally defined as the union of the biological community and its habitat. The community (the biotic) and the habitat (the abiotic) are intimately connected in a reciprocal relationship. As an example of this reciprocity, consider that physical factors shape the environment in which the beaver lives, while the beaver fundamentally changes the physical world in which it lives.

The term was first proposed in print in 1935 by A. G. Tansley, who wrote:

The more fundamental conception (than biotic community) is, as it seems to me, the whole system, including not only the organism-complex, but also the whole complex of physical factors -- the habitat factors in the widest sense."
Since its conception, the ecosystem concept has had a fundamental role in guiding ecological and environmental research. It has led to a great deal of interdisciplinary research, as biologists, chemists, geographers and geologists realize that their domains overlap and connect in a fundamental way in nature. Much of the recent theoretical work performed in ecology approaches whole ecosystems, rather than populations or communities by themselves.

One of the principal characteristics of the ecosystem is its scale-dependency. There are small (water-filled holes in tropical trees) and large (the boreal forest) ecosystems, the latter encompassing the former. Recent research has been focussed on not only modeling energy flux in these ecosystems, but understanding how different scales relate to one another. The rates at which biotic and abiotic reactions occur are directly related to the scale of the ecosystem, and the importance of one component to another is related to their similarity in scale. For example, climate changes (which affect ecosystems at a slow rate) have intense impacts on the forests but very little on the microbial communities living in the soil.

The ecosystem concept has also greatly changed the basic philosophies behind the management of natural resources. Classical approaches considered only the impact a development would have on the elements in question (for example, how a mine might affect the local walleye population -- a popular sport fish). Currently, developers and government agencies consider the role a development will play on all the elements of the ecosystem. The assimilation of ecosystem theory into management practices has changed the nature of environmental protection laws from prophylactic to preventative.