Abstract

Semiarid ecosystems are threatened by global warming due to longer dehydration times and increasing soil degradation. Mounting evidence indicates that, given the current trends, drylands are likely to expand and possibly experience catastrophic shifts from vegetated to desert states. Here, we explore a recent suggestion based on the concept of ecosystem terraformation, where a synthetic organism is used to counterbalance some of the nonlinear effects causing the presence of such tipping points. Using an explicit spatial model incorporating facilitation and considering a simplification of states found in semiarid ecosystems including vegetation, fertile and desert soil, we investigate how engineered microorganisms can shape the fate of these ecosystems. Specifically, two different, but complementary, terraformation strategies are proposed: Cooperation-based: C-terraformation; and Dispersion-based: D-terraformation. The first strategy involves the use of soil synthetic microorganisms to introduce cooperative loops (facilitation) with the vegetation. The second one involves the introduction of engineered microorganisms improving their dispersal capacity, thus facilitating the transition from desert to fertile soil. We show that small modifications enhancing cooperative loops can effectively modify the aridity level of the critical transition found at increasing soil degradation rates, also identifying a stronger protection against soil degradation by using the D-terraformation strategy. The same results are found in a mean-field model providing insights into the transitions and dynamics tied to these terraformation strategies. The potential consequences and extensions of these models are discussed.

Highlights

  • Subject Category: Ecology, Conservation, and Global Change Biology Subject Areas: bioengineering/ecology/synthetic biology Keywords: synthetic biology, ecological engineering, climate change, catastrophic shifts, mutualism, synthetic ecology

  • Using an explicit spatial model incorporating facilitation and considering a simplification of states found in semiarid ecosystems including vegetation, fertile and desert soil, we investigate how engineered microorganisms can shape the fate of these ecosystems

  • We show that small modifications enhancing cooperative loops can effectively modify the aridity level of the critical transition found at increasing soil degradation rates, identifying a stronger protection against soil degradation by using the D-terraformation strategy

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Summary

Modelling terraformation of semiarid ecosystems

In order to predict the impact of synthetic bioengineering strategies in arid and semiarid ecosystems, a spatial model given by a stochastic cellular automaton (CA) is employed. S 1⁄4 {D, S, V}: These states, as mentioned, are defined by desert (D) patches, by fertile soil (S) composed by patches occupied by engineered microorganism(s) with their natural community (e.g. soil crust), and by vegetation (V), respectively This is, an oversimplification that ignores most of the complexity and diversity involved, but allows for an analysis of the dynamics considering key ecological interactions such as transitions between states and both competition and facilitation processes. Introduces a reduction in the impact of desertification due to increased soil quality (by e.g. nutrient deposition) favoured by the synthetic microbial population The efficiency of this term is weighted by the constant α: large values of α imply a lower soil degradation rate due to the action of the synthetic microbes which are cooperatively coupled with vegetation at a local scale

D-terraformation
Models and results
Mean-field model
Spatial stochastic model
Vm meMk þ b
Findings
Discussion
Full Text
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