I have been thinking some more about where annuals fit in to ecology, and, therefore, where they fit in to Permaculture.
I think that even if we got the perfect perennial food systems growing, it would be wise to plant small beds of annuals every year, thus keeping up our seed stock. Then, if fire, flooding, tornadoes, hurricane, landslide, or war swept through, destroying our
trees, we could replant all that bare
land with annuals, saving it from erosion, and generating enough food to survive on till our trees were back into production. This is an annual plant's use in Creation; to act as disaster cover and food. (It would also seem a shame to let the breeding work of millennia got to waste.)
So if, as in my post above, annuals partly survive in perennial ecosystems because of animal caused disturbance, this makes a lot of sense. Animals plant annuals, and when a disaster sweeps through, annuals feed animals. If this is a true natural pattern, then it would seem to be a good one for us to replicate.
I just saw an example of this the other day; a squirrel burying a large tomato in a
lawn. It carefully dug a hole, planted in, and patted down the soil. If the lawn was not sprayed or mowed, there would be a tomato plant next year.
I would like to get some real ecologist's take on my Animal disturbance dependent annual idea: small populations of annuals kept viable by animals, to feed the animals (and protect the landscape) in disasters.