The Earth possesses a number of regulatory feedback mechanisms involving life. In the absence of a population of competing biospheres, it has proved hard to find a robust evolutionary mechanism that would generate environmental regulation. It has been suggested that regulation must require altruistic environmental alterations by organisms and, therefore, would be evolutionarily unstable. This need not be the case if organisms alter the environment as a selectively neutral by-product of their metabolism, as in the majority of biogeochemical reactions, but a question then arises: Why should the combined by-product effects of the biota have a stabilizing, rather than destabilizing, influence on the environment? Under certain conditions, select...
Multicellular organisms depend on developmental programs to coordinate growth and differentiation fr...
Humans depend on microbial communities for numerous ecosystem services such as global nutrient cycle...
Traditionally, evolutionary biology has mostly taken a retrospective view, looking backwards in time...
Models that demonstrate environmental regulation as a consequence of organism and environment coupli...
Models that demonstrate environmental regulation as a consequence of organism and environment coupli...
The Gaia hypothesis postulates that life influences Earth’s feedback mechanisms to form a self-regul...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI i...
In the contexts of food or beverage production, biotechnology, and human health, microbial communiti...
The idea that the biota can regulate the abiotic components of their environment to levels suitable ...
In microbial communities, the ecological interactions between species of different populations are r...
Environments shape communities by driving individual interactions and the evolutionary outcome of co...
Recent work with microbial communities has demonstrated an adaptive response to artificial selection...
Humans depend on microbial communities for numerous ecosystem services such as global nutrient cycle...
Recently postulated mechanisms and models can help explain the enduring ‘Gaia’ puzzle of environment...
<div><p>Multicellular organisms depend on developmental programs to coordinate growth and differenti...
Multicellular organisms depend on developmental programs to coordinate growth and differentiation fr...
Humans depend on microbial communities for numerous ecosystem services such as global nutrient cycle...
Traditionally, evolutionary biology has mostly taken a retrospective view, looking backwards in time...
Models that demonstrate environmental regulation as a consequence of organism and environment coupli...
Models that demonstrate environmental regulation as a consequence of organism and environment coupli...
The Gaia hypothesis postulates that life influences Earth’s feedback mechanisms to form a self-regul...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI i...
In the contexts of food or beverage production, biotechnology, and human health, microbial communiti...
The idea that the biota can regulate the abiotic components of their environment to levels suitable ...
In microbial communities, the ecological interactions between species of different populations are r...
Environments shape communities by driving individual interactions and the evolutionary outcome of co...
Recent work with microbial communities has demonstrated an adaptive response to artificial selection...
Humans depend on microbial communities for numerous ecosystem services such as global nutrient cycle...
Recently postulated mechanisms and models can help explain the enduring ‘Gaia’ puzzle of environment...
<div><p>Multicellular organisms depend on developmental programs to coordinate growth and differenti...
Multicellular organisms depend on developmental programs to coordinate growth and differentiation fr...
Humans depend on microbial communities for numerous ecosystem services such as global nutrient cycle...
Traditionally, evolutionary biology has mostly taken a retrospective view, looking backwards in time...