
TL;DR
This paper explores the potential of engineering synthetic organisms to restore ecological balance on a large scale, addressing climate change and ecosystem degradation through biosphere-level interventions.
Contribution
It proposes a novel approach of using synthetic biology for planetary-scale ecological engineering, integrating multiple scientific disciplines.
Findings
Synthetic organisms could potentially restore ecosystem homeostasis.
Designing such organisms requires understanding ecological networks and evolvability.
This approach offers an alternative to geo-engineering for climate and ecological issues.
Abstract
Our planet is experiencing an accelerated process of change associated to a variety of anthropogenic phenomena. The future of this transformation is uncertain, but there is general agreement about its negative unfolding that might threaten our own survival. Furthermore, the pace of the expected changes is likely to be abrupt: catastrophic shifts might be the most likely outcome of this ongoing, apparently slow process. Although different strategies for geo-engineering the planet have been advanced, none seem likely to safely revert the large-scale problems associated to carbon dioxide accumulation or ecosystem degradation. An alternative possibility considered here is inspired in the rapidly growing potential for engineering living systems. It would involve designing synthetic organisms capable of reproducing and expanding to large geographic scales with the goal of achieving a…
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