4.7 Article

Stability of a planetary climate system with the biosphere species competing for resources

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW E
Volume 103, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevE.103.022202

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swedish Foundation for International Cooperation in Research and Higher Education (STINT) [IB 2018-7517]
  2. University of Dayton Research Council Seed Grant
  3. RUDN University Program 5-100
  4. National Science Foundation [DBI-1300426]
  5. University of Tennessee, Knoxville
  6. NSF [DMS-1440386]

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This study examines the stability of a planetary climate system with a dynamic biosphere under the Gaia concept. It is found that as long as biodiversity is sufficiently high, feedback from biosphere dynamics will not break the system's stability. However, the system can lose its stability if biodiversity decreases, potentially leading to global climate change.
With the growing number of discovered exoplanets, the Gaia concept finds its second wind. The Gaia concept defines that the biosphere of an inhabited planet regulates a planetary climate through feedback loops such that the planet remains habitable. Crunching the Gaia puzzle has been a focus of intense empirical research. Much less attention has been paid to the mathematical realization of this concept. In this paper, we consider the stability of a planetary climate system with the dynamic biosphere by linking a conceptual climate model to a generic population dynamics model with random parameters. We first show that the dynamics of the corresponding coupled system possesses multiple timescales and hence falls into the class of slow-fast dynamics. We then investigate the properties of a general dynamical system to which our model belongs and prove that the feedbacks from the biosphere dynamics cannot break the system's stability as long as the biodiversity is sufficiently high. That may explain why the climate is apparently stable over long time intervals. Interestingly, our coupled climate-biosphere system can lose its stability if biodiversity decreases; in this case, the evolution of the biosphere under the effect of random factors can lead to a global climate change.

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