Table of Contents
References & Edit History Related Topics

News

Milieudefensie targets ING in new greenhouse gas legal case Mar. 28, 2025, 3:36 AM ET (DutchNews.nl)

The notion that the biosphere exerts important controls on the atmosphere and other parts of the Earth system has increasingly gained acceptance among earth and ecosystem scientists. While this concept has its origins in the work of American oceanographer Alfred C. Redfield in the mid-1950s, it was English scientist and inventor James Lovelock that gave it its modern currency in the late 1970s. Lovelock initially proposed that the biospheric transformations of the atmosphere support the biosphere in an adaptive way through a sort of “genetic group selection.” This idea generated extensive criticism and spawned a steady stream of new research that has enriched the debate and advanced both ecology and environmental science. Lovelock called his idea the “Gaia Hypothesis” and defined Gaia as

a complex entity involving Earth’s biosphere, atmosphere, oceans, and soil; the totality constituting a feedback of cybernetic systems which seeks an optimal physical and chemical environment for life on this planet.

The Greek word Gaia, or Gaea, meaning “Mother Earth,” is Lovelock’s name for Earth, which is envisioned as a “superorganism” engaged in planetary biogeophysiology. The goal of this superorganism is to produce a homeostatic, or balanced, Earth system. The scientific process of research and debate will eventually resolve the issue of the reality of the “Gaian homeostatic superorganism,” and Lovelock has since revised his hypothesis to exclude goal-driven genetic group selection. Nevertheless, it is now an operative norm in contemporary science that the biosphere and the atmosphere interact in such a way that an understanding of one requires an understanding of the other. Furthermore, the reality of two-way interactions between climate and life is well recognized.

The evolution of life and the atmosphere

Life on Earth began at least as early as 3.5 billion years ago during the middle of the Archean Eon (about 4 billion to 2.5 billion years ago). It was during this interval that life first began to exercise certain controls on the atmosphere. The atmosphere’s prebiological state is often characterized as being rich in water vapour and carbon dioxide. Though some nitrogen was also present, little if any oxygen was available. Chemical reactions with hydrogen sulfide, hydrogen, and reduced compounds of nitrogen and sulfur precluded any but the shortest lifetime for free oxygen in the atmosphere. As a result, life evolved in an atmosphere that was reducing (high hydrogen content) rather than oxidizing (high oxygen content). In addition to their chemically reducing character, the predominant gases of this prebiotic atmosphere, with the exception of nitrogen, were largely transparent to incoming sunlight but opaque to outgoing terrestrial infrared radiation. As a result, these gases are called, perhaps improperly, greenhouse gases (see greenhouse effect) because they are able to slow the release of outgoing radiation back into space.

In the Archean Eon, the Sun produced as much as 25 percent less light than it does today; however, Earth’s temperature was much like that of today. This is possible because the greenhouse gas-rich Archean atmosphere was effective in retarding the loss of terrestrial radiation to space. The resulting long residence time of energy within the Earth-atmosphere system resulted in a warmer atmosphere than would have been possible otherwise. The average temperature of Earth’s surface in the early Archean Eon was warmer than the modern global average. It was, according to some sources, probably similar to temperatures found in today’s tropics. Depending on the amount of nitrogen present during the Archean Eon, it has been suggested that the atmosphere may have held more than 1,000 times as much carbon dioxide than it does today.

Archean organisms included photosynthetic and chemosynthetic bacteria, methane-producing bacteria, and a more primitive group of organisms now called the “Archaea” (a group of prokaryotes more related to eukaryotes than to bacteria and found in extreme environments). Through their metabolic processes, organisms of the Archean Eon slowly changed the atmosphere. Hydrogen rose from trace amounts to about 1 part per million (ppm) of dry air. Methane concentrations increased from near zero to about 100 ppm. Oxygen increased from near zero to 1 ppm, whereas nitrogen concentrations rose to encompass 99 percent of all atmospheric molecules excluding water vapour. Carbon dioxide concentrations decreased to only 0.3 percent of the total; however, this was nearly 10 times the current concentration. The composition of the atmosphere, its radiation budget, its thermodynamics, and its fluid dynamics were transformed by life from the Archean Eon.

American geochemist Robert Garrels calculated that, in the absence of life and given the burial rate of carbon in rocks, oxygen would be unavailable to form water, and free hydrogen would be lost to space. Without the presence of life and compounded by this loss of hydrogen, there would be no oceans, and Earth would have become merely a dusty planet by the middle of the Archean Eon. By the end of the Archean Eon 2.5 billion years ago, both the pigment chlorophyll and photosynthetic organisms had evolved such that the production of oxygen increased rapidly. The atmosphere became transformed from a reducing atmosphere with carbon dioxide, limited oxygen, and anaerobic organisms (that is, life-forms that do not require oxygen for respiration) in control to one with an oxidizing atmosphere that was rich in oxygen, poor in carbon dioxide, and dominated by aerobic organisms (that is, life-forms requiring oxygen for respiration).

With the decline in carbon dioxide and a rise in oxygen, the greenhouse warming capacity of Earth’s atmosphere was sharply reduced; however, this happened over a period of time when the energy produced by the Sun increased systematically. These compensating changes resulted in a relatively constant planetary temperature over much of Earth’s history.

The role of the biosphere in the Earth-atmosphere system

The biosphere and Earth’s energy budget

Biogenic gases in the atmosphere play a role in the dynamics of Earth’s planetary radiation budget, the thermodynamics of the planet’s moist atmosphere, and, indirectly, the mechanics of the fluid flows that are Earth’s planetary wind systems. In addition, human cultural and economic activities add a new dimension to the relationship between the biosphere and the atmosphere. While humans are biologically trivial compared with bacteria in the exchange of gases with the atmosphere, chemical compounds produced from human industrial activities and other economic enterprises are changing the gaseous composition of the atmosphere in climatically significant ways. The largest changes involve the harvesting of ancient carbon stores. This organic material has been transformed into fossil fuels (coal, petroleum, natural gas, and others) by geologic processes acting upon the remains of plants and animals over many millions of years. Different forms of carbon may be burned and thus used as energy sources. In so doing, organic carbon is converted into carbon dioxide. Additionally, humans are also burning trees, grasses, and other biomass for cooking purposes and clearing the land for agriculture and other activities. The combination of burning both fossil fuels and biomass is enriching the atmosphere with carbon dioxide and adding to the essential reservoir of greenhouse gases (see global warming).

Earth’s atmosphere is largely transparent to sunlight. Of the sunlight absorbed by the entire Earth-atmosphere system, about one-third is absorbed by the atmosphere and two-thirds by Earth’s surface. Sunlight is absorbed by the molecules of the atmosphere, by cloud droplets, and by dust and debris. Though oxygen and nitrogen make up nearly 99 percent of the atmosphere, these diatomic molecules do not vibrate in a way that permits them to absorb terrestrial radiation. They are largely transparent to outgoing terrestrial radiation as well as to incoming solar radiation.

Over the continents, the surface cover of vegetation is the principal absorbing medium of Earth’s surface, although other surfaces such as bare rock, sand, and water also absorb solar radiation. At night, absorption at the surface (that is, below 1.2 metres [4 feet]) is reradiated, in the form of long-wave infrared radiation, away from Earth’s surface back toward space. Most of this infrared radiation is absorbed by the principal biogenic trace gases of the atmosphere—the so-called greenhouse gases: water vapour, carbon dioxide, and methane. Without these biogenic greenhouse gases, Earth would be 33 °C (59 °F) colder on average than it is. A moderate-emission scenario from the 2007 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report predicts that the continued addition of greenhouse gases from fossil fuels will increase the average global temperature by between 2.3 and 4.3 °C (4.1 and 7.7 °F) over the next century. Other scenarios, predicting greater greenhouse gas emissions, forecast even greater global warming.