The evolution of the Earth system

Prof. Tim Lenton from the  University of Exeter will give an exciting talk about earth system feedbacks, sequential selection and much more.

Earth at night Picture by NASA

Photo by NASA on Unsplash

Recently postulated mechanisms and models can help explain the enduring ‘Gaia’ puzzle of environmental regulation mediated by life. Natural selection can produce nutrient recycling at local scales and regulation of heterogeneous environmental variables at ecosystem scales. However, global-scale environmental regulation involves a temporal and spatial decoupling of effects from actors that makes conventional evolutionary explanations problematic. Instead, global regulation can emerge by a process of ‘sequential selection’ in which systems that destabilize their environment are short-lived and result in extinctions and reorganizations until a stable attractor is found. Such persistence-enhancing properties can in turn increase the likelihood of acquiring further persistence-enhancing properties through ‘selection by survival alone’. Thus, Earth system feedbacks provide a filter for persistent combinations of macroevolutionary innovations.
 

We look forward to listening to this exciting talk, and we hope you are too.

Published Oct. 9, 2019 9:54 AM - Last modified Mar. 15, 2022 12:01 PM