Beyond planetary-scale feedback self-regulation: Gaia as an autopoietic system

Tomas Veloz, Sergio Rubin, Pedro Maldonado

    Onderzoeksoutput: Articlepeer review

    16 Citaten (Scopus)

    Samenvatting

    The Gaia hypothesis states that the Earth is an instance of life. However, appraisals of it tend to focus on the claim that life is a feedback self-regulator that controls Earth's chemistry and climate dynamics, yet, self-regulation by feedbacks is not a definitive characteristic of living systems. Here, we consider the characterization of biological systems as autopoietic systems (causally organized to self-produce through metabolic efficient closure) and then ask whether the Gaia hypothesis is a tractable question from this standpoint. A proof-of-concept based on Chemical Organization Theory (COT) and the Zero Deficiency Theorem (ZDT) applied on a simple but representative Earth's molecular reaction network supports the thesis of Gaia as an autopoietic system. We identify the formation of self-producing organizations within the reaction network, corresponding to recognizable scenarios of Earth's history. These results provide further opportunities to discuss how the instantiation of autopoiesis at the planetary scale could manifests central features of biological phenomenon, such as autonomy and anticipation, and what this implies for the further development of the Gaia theory, Earth's climate modelling and geoengineering.
    Originele taal-2English
    Artikelnummer104314
    TijdschriftBioSystems Journal
    Volume199
    DOI's
    StatusPublished - jan 2021

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