Literature DB >> 26789354

The Case for a Gaian Bottleneck: The Biology of Habitability.

Aditya Chopra1, Charles H Lineweaver1.   

Abstract

The prerequisites and ingredients for life seem to be abundantly available in the Universe. However, the Universe does not seem to be teeming with life. The most common explanation for this is a low probability for the emergence of life (an emergence bottleneck), notionally due to the intricacies of the molecular recipe. Here, we present an alternative Gaian bottleneck explanation: If life emerges on a planet, it only rarely evolves quickly enough to regulate greenhouse gases and albedo, thereby maintaining surface temperatures compatible with liquid water and habitability. Such a Gaian bottleneck suggests that (i) extinction is the cosmic default for most life that has ever emerged on the surfaces of wet rocky planets in the Universe and (ii) rocky planets need to be inhabited to remain habitable. In the Gaian bottleneck model, the maintenance of planetary habitability is a property more associated with an unusually rapid evolution of biological regulation of surface volatiles than with the luminosity and distance to the host star.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 26789354     DOI: 10.1089/ast.2015.1387

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Astrobiology        ISSN: 1557-8070            Impact factor:   4.335


  6 in total

1.  Habitability on Early Mars and the Search for Biosignatures with the ExoMars Rover.

Authors:  Jorge L Vago; Frances Westall; Andrew J Coates; Ralf Jaumann; Oleg Korablev; Valérie Ciarletti; Igor Mitrofanov; Jean-Luc Josset; Maria Cristina De Sanctis; Jean-Pierre Bibring; Fernando Rull; Fred Goesmann; Harald Steininger; Walter Goetz; William Brinckerhoff; Cyril Szopa; François Raulin; Frances Westall; Howell G M Edwards; Lyle G Whyte; Alberto G Fairén; Jean-Pierre Bibring; John Bridges; Ernst Hauber; Gian Gabriele Ori; Stephanie Werner; Damien Loizeau; Ruslan O Kuzmin; Rebecca M E Williams; Jessica Flahaut; François Forget; Jorge L Vago; Daniel Rodionov; Oleg Korablev; Håkan Svedhem; Elliot Sefton-Nash; Gerhard Kminek; Leila Lorenzoni; Luc Joudrier; Viktor Mikhailov; Alexander Zashchirinskiy; Sergei Alexashkin; Fabio Calantropio; Andrea Merlo; Pantelis Poulakis; Olivier Witasse; Olivier Bayle; Silvia Bayón; Uwe Meierhenrich; John Carter; Juan Manuel García-Ruiz; Pietro Baglioni; Albert Haldemann; Andrew J Ball; André Debus; Robert Lindner; Frédéric Haessig; David Monteiro; Roland Trautner; Christoph Voland; Pierre Rebeyre; Duncan Goulty; Frédéric Didot; Stephen Durrant; Eric Zekri; Detlef Koschny; Andrea Toni; Gianfranco Visentin; Martin Zwick; Michel van Winnendael; Martín Azkarate; Christophe Carreau
Journal:  Astrobiology       Date:  2017-07-01       Impact factor: 4.335

2.  Searching for Life, Mindful of Lyfe's Possibilities.

Authors:  Michael L Wong; Stuart Bartlett; Sihe Chen; Louisa Tierney
Journal:  Life (Basel)       Date:  2022-05-25

3.  Gaia as Solaris: An Alternative Default Evolutionary Trajectory.

Authors:  Srdja Janković; Ana Katić; Milan M Ćirković
Journal:  Orig Life Evol Biosph       Date:  2022-04-20       Impact factor: 1.120

Review 4.  Alien Mindscapes-A Perspective on the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence.

Authors:  Nathalie A Cabrol
Journal:  Astrobiology       Date:  2016-07-06       Impact factor: 4.335

5.  Life's Energy and Information: Contrasting Evolution of Volume- versus Surface-Specific Rates of Energy Consumption.

Authors:  Anastassia M Makarieva; Andrei V Nefiodov; Bai-Lian Li
Journal:  Entropy (Basel)       Date:  2020-09-13       Impact factor: 2.524

6.  Lotka-Volterra models for extraterrestrial self-replicating probes.

Authors:  Yifan Chen; Jiayi Ni; Yen Chin Ong
Journal:  Eur Phys J Plus       Date:  2022-10-06       Impact factor: 3.758

  6 in total

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