Ecosystem biogeochemistry considered as a distributed metabolic network ordered by maximum entropy production

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Biogeochemistry
Entropy
Free energy
Maximum entropy production
Ecosystem
Metabolic networks
Self organization
Living systems
Dissipative structures
Life
Optimal control
Abstract
We examine the application of the maximum entropy production principle for describing ecosystem biogeochemistry. Since ecosystems can be functionally stable despite changes in species composition, we utilize a distributed metabolic network for describing biogeochemistry, which synthesizes generic biological structures that catalyze reaction pathways, but is otherwise organism independent. Allocation of biological structure and regulation of biogeochemical reactions is determined via solution of an optimal control problem in which entropy production is maximized. However, because synthesis of biological structures cannot occur if entropy production is maximized instantaneously, we propose that information stored within the metagenome allows biological systems to maximize entropy production when averaged over time. This differs from abiotic systems that maximize entropy production at a point in space-time, which we refer to as the steepest descent pathway. It is the spatiotemporal averaging that allows biological systems to outperform abiotic processes in entropy production, at least in many situations. A simulation of a methanotrophic system is used to demonstrate the approach. We conclude with a brief discussion on the implications of viewing ecosystems as self organizing molecular machines that function to maximize entropy production at the ecosystem level of organization.
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Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2009. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of The Royal Society for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B 365 (2010): 1417-1427, doi:10.1098/rstb.2009.0272.
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