What Would Happen If We Replaced Natural Ecosystems with Artificial Ones?

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The discussion revolves around the hypothetical scenario of destroying all life forms on Earth and the implications of such an action. Key points include the acknowledgment that eliminating all life, including plants and animals, would disrupt the delicate balance of ecosystems. The idea of replacing certain animals with robots and selectively polluting oceans is criticized, as pollution affects interconnected water systems. The conversation also touches on the unrealistic notion of bringing water from Mars when Earth has sufficient water. The potential consequences of eradicating all life include significant atmospheric changes and a drop in temperature, leading to a lifeless planet. The discussion highlights the interdependence of species, emphasizing that trees and plants cannot survive without the organisms that support their growth and reproduction. The concept of spontaneous abiogenesis is mentioned, suggesting that life could eventually re-emerge, but the conditions on Earth today differ significantly from those of early Earth, complicating predictions about the pace of biogenesis. Overall, the conversation underscores the importance of preserving existing ecosystems rather than contemplating their destruction.
chound
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What would happen if we destroy all the life forms on Earth ?
Then we grow the trees and plants and some organisms(somelike dogs and cats could be replaced by robots ) which are necessary only for out survival?
We could mark the amzon forest and other tropical areas reserved for forests and remove all humas from there.

Bring water from Mars.
Pollute seas and rivers.
Or we could pollute some oceans and leave others clean?
And create inland reservoirs for water.
 
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Some one answer it please.
 
chound said:
What would happen if we destroy all the life forms on Earth ?
Then we grow the trees and plants and some organisms(somelike dogs and cats could be replaced by robots ) which are necessary only for out survival?
We could mark the amzon forest and other tropical areas reserved for forests and remove all humas from there.

If you destroyed all life forms, wouldn't that include us and all these plants and organisms you want to grow? Nature is a pretty delicate balancing act. Eliminating even one species can have a chain reaction on many species.

chound said:
Bring water from Mars.
What water on Mars? We have plenty of water on Earth anyway, so why try to find another planet to obtain it?

chound said:
Pollute seas and rivers.
Huh?

chound said:
Or we could pollute some oceans and leave others clean?

All the oceans are interconnected, so what you dump into one eventually gets to all of them. Why not just try to stop polluting instead of deciding to just selectively pollute?

chound said:
And create inland reservoirs for water.

We already have inland reservoirs for water.
 
chound said:
What would happen if we destroy all the life forms on Earth ?
If all life forms on Earth were destroyed - an extraordinarily difficult thing to do by the way, there are bacteria living quite happily more than 10 km beneath the solid rock surface of ancient continental plates (e.g. Australia, Greenland) - the atmosphere would change (e.g. oxygen disappear), the average temperature would probably drop, weathering of rock would decrease (but the details would include great variation), ... and sometime before the Sun goes red giant, life would start all over again on Earth (whether from spontaneous abiogenesis or panspermia, who knows?).
 
No
We plant trees in specific areas to give oxygen
 
chound, you're being inconsistent. You are asking what will happen if we destroy ALL life forms, but then have trees spared for planting. Trees are a lifeform, so presumably you aren't destroying everything.

Trees also benefit from the nitrogen-producing bacteria in the soil, along with the other bacteria that break down the dead leaves back into other nutrients for the soil. Many require animals to carry their seeds (and deposit the seeds in a nice pile of fertilizer). Worms help aerate the soil. Insects and birds carry pollen the trees need for reproducing. You can't eliminate everything except the trees and expect the trees to survive.
 
Er, the Earth would be another lifeless sphere floating in the void? Spontaneous abiogenesis would probably resume and probably on a more rapid timeline.
 
Chronos said:
Er, the Earth would be another lifeless sphere floating in the void? Spontaneous abiogenesis would probably resume and probably on a more rapid timeline.

But the Earth now has an Oxygen bearing atmosphere, whereas the original prebiotic Earth did not. Surely that will affect the pace of biogenesis? Whether to accelerate, retard, or fully prevent, who can say?
 
We can mechanically control all the proceses like areating theground, fixing nitrogen?
 
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chound said:
We can mechanically control all the proceses like areating theground, fixing nitrogen?

No, we don't currently have any way mechanically (or in any other way) replicate all those process. Why would we want to do that anyway when nature does a pretty good job of it already?
 

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