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In: Marine Phytoplankton Editor: William T. Kersey and Samuel P. Munger ISBN 978-1-60741-087-4 © 2009 Nova Science Publishers, Inc. Chapter 6 THE RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN MARINE PHYTOPLANKTON, DIMETHYLSULPHIDE AND THE GLOBAL CLIMATE: THE CLAW HYPOTHESIS AS A LAKATOSIAN PROGRESSIVE PROBLEMSHIFT Nei Freitas Nunes-Neto*, Ricardo Santos do Carmo and Charbel Niño El-Hani Research Group on History, Philosophy, and Biology Teaching, Institute of Biology, Federal University of Bahia Salvador, Bahia, Brazil ABSTRACT In this chapter, we address the origin and development of a scientific hypothesis about the connection between some species of marine phytoplankton, sulphur compounds, and clouds over the oceans. This hypothesis is very relevant to the understanding of the climate system. Investigations carried out by Lovelock and colleagues in the beginnings of the 1970s were important to the construction of this hypothesis. Those studies searched for a stable intermediary in the sulphur cycle, which would be responsible for transferring this element from the oceans to the land surface. Based on studies about the release of dimethylsulphide (DMS, a volatile sulphur compound) by marine phytoplankton species, as well as the process of cloud formation and its relationship with planetary albedo, Charlson, Lovelock, Andreae and Warren proposed in 1987 what became known as the CLAW hypothesis. This hypothesis proposes that the rapid oxidation of DMS in the atmosphere leads to the formation of a non-sea-salt aerosol (NSS–SO42-), which, when oxidized, constitutes nuclei required for the condensation of water vapor, and, thus, to cloud formation over the oceans. Since * Correspondence Address Rua Barão de Jeremoabo, 147, Campus Universitário de Ondina, Instituto de Biologia, Departamento de Biologia Geral. Salvador, Bahia, Brazil, 40170-290 Phone: +55 (71) 32836568. Email Addresses: [email protected], [email protected], [email protected] 2 Nei Freitas Nunes-Neto, Ricardo Santos do Carmo and Charbel Niño El-Hani clouds reflect part of the solar radiation that reaches the planet, they contribute to cool the planetary surface. Therefore, DMS has been pointed out as a negative greenhouse gas, which could counterbalance the heating effects of greenhouse gases such as CO2 and CH4. We should stress, however, that the degree in which DMS can contribute to cool the Earth surface and the mechanisms responsible for DMS production by the phytoplankton and other organisms of the marine biota are still open issues in the scientific community. However, despite the controversies, Charlson and colleagues’ hypothesis gave rise to a whole new area of interdisciplinary scientific research, known as the ‘cloud-algae link’. Here, we intend to show how this hypothesis and the new research area resulting from it have an impact on studies about climate change, and, also, about the relationships between the biota and its physicochemical environment. We intend to do this from an epistemological point of view, holding that the success of the CLAW hypothesis can be qualified as a “progressive problemshift” in the sense of Imre Lakatos’ epistemology. We also offer some considerations on the scientific status of Gaia. Keywords: CLAW hypothesis, Cloud-algae link, Dimethylsulphide, Climate change, Epistemology, Lakatos, progressive problemshift, Gaia. Even if CLAW turns out to be utterly irrelevant climatically, it will leave a rich and fundamentally important legacy in our perceptions of how the world works and in the way we need to do our science in order to understand it. Anonymous reviewer, quoted in Liss & Lovelock, 2007 1. INTRODUCTION The quotation used above as an epigraph straightforwardly expresses the central argument we will elaborate throughout this chapter, mainly because it is an ipsis litteris quotation of an anonimous reviewer. Here, we will address the development of a scientific hypothesis that, with little more than two decades of existence, has had a positive impact on researches related to the planetary dynamics of sulphur and climate changes. The hypothesis at stake was put forward in 1987 and became known in the literature as the “CLAW hypothesis”, an acronym of the names of the four scientists that proposed it (Charlson, Lovelock, Andreae, and Warren). Very briefly, it states that the synthesis and release of a dominant volatile sulphur compound, dimethylsulphide (DMS), by oceanic algae originates cloud condensation nuclei (CCN), which are particles that favors the formation of clouds (Rissman et al., 2007. For more detailed explanations, see section 2 of this chapter). The oceanic clouds resulting from the activities of algae can contribute to cool the planetary surface, since they reflect a great deal of the incoming solar radiation. In spite of the controversies raised by the hypothesis since it was proposed, it has been relatively well received by the scientific community and had a significant influence on the investigations done in several disciplines dedicated to the understanding of the climate. It also contributed to a better understanding of the complex relationships between living beings and their physicochemical environment, a central topic for the science of ecology. Between the end of the 1980s and the beginnings of the 1990s, the CLAW hypothesis led to the Relationships between Marine Phytoplankton, Dimethylsulphide and the Climate… 3 appearance of a new and interesting interdisciplinary research area, known as ‘algae-cloud link’, or sometimes, “algae-cloud connection” (see Bell, 1986). The CLAW hypothesis and this new area continue to be an enthusiastic topic to several researchers, even beyond the natural sciences, given their sociopolitical implications to the problem of global warming. This chapter begins with an explanation of the CLAW hypothesis, which is also situated in a historical context and give room to some epistemological remarks. In the subsequent section, we briefly consider the theory of science developed by Imre Lakatos, which will be instrumental to the building of our central argument in the chapter. We hold there that CLAW can be treated as a progressive problemshift on our understanding of the systems at stake, from a Lakatosian perspective. Then, in the next section, we will move on to present the main implications of the CLAW hypothesis to the understanding of the dynamical relationships established between living beings and their physicochemical environments, sketching important consequences to the problem of global climate change. Finally, we will offer our concluding remarks. 2. FROM A GAP IN THE SULPHUR CYCLE TO A NEW RESEARCH AREA Until the beginnings of 1970s, there were many doubts about the dynamics of the global sulphur cycle. Indeed, our knowledge about the cycle of this fundamental element was quite incomplete (Volk, 1998). One important gap was related to the chemical stable compound that transported sulphur from the oceans to the land surface. As the English chemist James Lovelock said: The weathering of sulphur-bearing rocks, the sulphur extracted from the ground by plants, and the amounts put into the air by the burning of fossil fuels, are not nearly enough to compensate for the millions of tons washed into the sea each year (Lovelock, 2000, p. 122). The mechanical action of water along the rivers and the transfer of sulphur to the oceans in the form of sulphate ions make the land lose great amounts of this element. This explains why sulphur is more abundant in the oceans than in the land. Since sulphur is an essential element to all living beings, if there were no mechanism that could bring it back to the land masses, terrestrial organisms would not be able to survive. Since these organisms are not deprived of this element, then, what would be the reposition mechanism of sulphur to the continental ecosystems? In the beginnings of the 1970s, this was an important focus of research for several scientists interested in the dynamics of sulphur. The conventional wisdom of that time ascribed to hydrogen sulphide (H2S) the role of transferring sulphur from the oceans to the land. However, for this hypothesis to be true, huge amounts of H2S should be released from the oceans, in order to compensate for the loss of sulphur from the terrestrial environment. But this hypothesis could not be supported, as Lovelock, Maggs and Rasmussen (1972) pointed out. They noticed that the seawater has such an oxidative power that there could not be H2S in the oceans in a concentration enough to carry out the transfer of the needed amounts of sulphur to the land (Lovelock et al., 1972). Moreover, H2S has such a strong and peculiar smell that would have to be easily detected. However, this compound was never detected in enough concentrations to be accounted responsible for the transfer of sulphur. 4 Nei Freitas Nunes-Neto, Ricardo Santos do Carmo and Charbel Niño El-Hani It is important to notice that the hypothesis that H2S would be the intermediary chemical compound in the transfer of sulphur derived from a traditional perspective on the cycles of elements, namely, that only physicochemical sources could account for the huge amounts of substances involved in such cycles. Non-biological sources of H2S that were already known, such as volcanoes and fumaroles, were the main candidates to be the sources of sulphur, with the exception of industrial human activities. According to Charlson et al. (1987), volcanoes and fumaroles release about 10 to 20 % of the total natural flux of gaseous sulphur to the atmosphere. But, as these authors argue, the emission of sulphur by volcanoes is highly variable in space and time, and, consequently, the production of sulphate aerosol by oxidation of volcanic sulphur during the quiescent stage of a volcano can be only regionally important. In turn, large volcanic eruptions, which tend to impact huge areas, are very rare events, and thus cannot play a substantial role in the explanation of the sulphur cycle. All this shows that more consistent and acceptable models of the sulphur cycle were required. James Lovelock, the main proponent of the Gaia theory (or, as we will call throughout this chapter, ‘research programme’), gave major contributions to the construction of such models from his theoretical perspective, according to which life is not a passive player in the biogeochemical Earth system. This means that Gaia, albeit controversial, has been providing far-reaching contributions to science since the 1970s. Gaia proposes that a cybernetic system including the biota and the abiotic components of the Earth regulates environmental variables at a global scale, keeping them within a range that makes Earth inhabitable by living beings. From this perspective, life is an active and, even more, a central player in the planetary dynamics of elements. Living beings are influenced by the geological environment, but they also produce deep and long-lasting effects on this same environment. This theoretical standpoint is part of the explanation of why Lovelock and colleagues (1972) saw, in Fred Challenger’s observation that many marine organisms release dimethylsulphide (DMS), a reason for casting doubt on the contemporary views about the sulphur cycle. Based on Challenger’s studies, they proposed that the “DMS is the natural compound of sulphur which fills the role originally assigned to H2S; that of transferring sulphur from the seas through the air to land surfaces” (Lovelock et al., 1972, p. 452). After all, one cannot escape from noticing that the suggestion of DMS as the intermediary involved in the planetary dynamics of sulphur was grounded on a central thesis of the Gaia research programme, namely, that all living beings are deeply and systematically involved in regulatory mechanisms of the global physicochemical variables. From this perspective, great emphasis is given to the role of living beings as sources of chemical compounds that play a role in geochemical cycles, that is, these cycles tend to be generally seen as biogeochemical cycles, in a quite strong sense. After the publication of the 1972 paper by Lovelock and colleagues, new studies showed that several species of marine algae release DMS to the atmosphere. As Andreae and Raemdonck (1983, p. 746-7) observed, “DMS is the dominant source of biogenic volatile sulfur compounds to the marine atmosphere” (For reviews, see Lovelock, 2000; Gabric et al., 2001). It was also shown that DMS, as well as other compounds, could be involved in the process of cloud nucleation (For further details, see Pham et al., 1995; Ayers & Cainey, 2007; Liss & Lovelock, 2007). This additional role of DMS led to yet another key contribution from Gaia to our understanding of the Earth system, to which we will turn our attention now. The existence of a relationship between cloud albedo and the climate has already been suggested by Twomey (1977). And Shaw (1983), in turn, proposed that biogenic atmospheric Relationships between Marine Phytoplankton, Dimethylsulphide and the Climate… 5 sulphur aerosols could participate in the radiative balance of the planet, significantly affecting the climate. However, neither Twomey nor Shaw constructed a hypothesis linking algae, clouds, sulphate compounds and the global climate, as put forward by Charlson et al. (1987). In their paper, taking as a starting point a series of previous works on sulphur dynamics and cloud formation, and assuming a systemic perspective on Earth (such as that offered by Gaia), Charlson and colleagues proposed what became known in the literature as the CLAW hypothesis. In a very brief and schematic way, this hypothesis claims that there is a negative feedback loop linking the algae, DMS and clouds. According to Charlson et al. (1987, p. 656), “the warmest, most saline, and most intensely illuminated regions of the oceans have the highest rate of DMS emission to the atmosphere”. The DMS in the ocean water is ventilated to the atmosphere. In the atmosphere, DMS is quickly oxidized, giving origin to, at least, three substances: (1) DMSO (dimethylsulphoxide); (2) SO2 (sulphur dioxide) and (3) MAS (methane sulphonic acid). The pathways of oxidation in the atmosphere are complex. However, we can say that the oxidation of the SO2 produces ‘non-sea-salt sulphate (NSS-sulphate) aerosol particles’, which can form sulphate particles (SO42-), that play the role of CCN for water vapor. These nuclei are known as cloud condensation nuclei (CCN). The CCN are acidic particles that have properties that make it possible that the water vapour molecules condensate. As a consequence, the CCN derived from DMS lead to the growth of cloud droplets in the troposphere of the open oceans (Rissman et al., 2007). As the concentration of clouds over the oceans increases, less solar radiation reaches the surface waters, since clouds tend to reflect radiation back to space. As a consequence, less DMS is released by the marine phytoplankton and this, in turn, reduces the production of clouds, closing the negative feedback mechanism. This is, in sum, the mechanism proposed by the CLAW hypothesis. Today, we know more about the details of this process (Ayers & Cainey, 2007). The investigations developed after the proposition of CLAW showed that not only the phytoplankton species are important to the release of DMS to the atmosphere. Other species of the marine community, including organisms of the zooplankton, bacteria and virus, are also relevant to the release of DMS to the atmosphere. As we will explain in more detail below, the algae synthesize DMSP, a sulphur compound that has important functions in the algal metabolism. This substance is the precursor of DMS. The convertion of DMSP into DMS, through a DMSP-lyase, occurs in the interior of the algal cell; or in the marine environment (after cell lysis due to viral attacks or through exudation of the substances by the cell); or in the guts of the zooplankton, which feeds on the algae. These are alternative routes to the presence of DMS in the oceans and, thus, to its atmospherical origin. Moreover, part of the DMS molecules undergo photolysis or are consumed by bacteria, since they are a good source of sulphur and carbon. Thus, we can notice that the DMS flux to the atmosphere depends on the interactions among the organisms of the planktonic food web, in the ocean environment, and not only from the influence of solar radiation and salt content on the phytoplanktonic organisms, as originally proposed in the CLAW hypothesis (For a good review of this matter, see Simó, 2001; see also Figure 1). 6 Nei Freitas Nunes-Neto, Ricardo Santos do Carmo and Charbel Niño El-Hani Figure elaborated by the authors. Figure 1. Schematic representation of the main mechanisms involved in the production of DMS and, consequently, clouds over the oceans. The picture resulting from scientific research since 1987 is more complex than that proposed by the original CLAW hypothesis. However, this hypothesis is the historical source of the subsequent developments. DMSaq: dimethylsulphide in the marine water, DMSg: dimethylsulphide in the atmosphere, DMSP: dimethylsulphoniopropionate DMSO: dimethylsulphoxide, MSA: methane sulphonic acid, SO2: sulphur dioxide, SO4: sulphate ions, NSSsulphate: non-sea-salt sulphate, CCN: cloud condensation nuclei. The CLAW hypothesis generated an intense debate since it was proposed, especially in virtue of its implications to the problem of climate change (Ayers & Cainey, 2007; Vallina et al., 2007; van Rijssel & Gieskes, 2002; Gabric et al., 2001; Andreae & Crutzen, 1997; Schwartz, 1988). More than 1500 papers were published about this hypothesis since 1987, according to Ayers and Cainey (2007). This indicates how it was deemed relevant by the scientific community. Notice also that Charlson, Lovelock, Andreae, and Warren won, in 1988, the Norbert Gerbier-Mumm Award, given by the World Meteorological Organization (associated to the United Nations) as an acknowledgement of their discoveries and the elaboration of a mechanism to explain the sulphur cycle (WMO, 2007). Nevertheless, in the scientific community, some doubts remain about the exact relationships among the algae, other organisms of the marine biota, the sulphur compounds, the clouds, and the climate. Some of them were highlighted by Charlson et al. (1987) Relationships between Marine Phytoplankton, Dimethylsulphide and the Climate… 7 themselves. For instance, it has been debated by the scientific community whether the influence of the solar radiation on the synthesis of DMSP by the algae is positive or negative. The CLAW hypothesis proposes that the synthesis of DMSP is increased by the solar radiation, in such a manner that the final result is a negative feedback (regulatory) mechanism. But the authors themselves recognize that they did not have enough elements to decide about this point at that time. If the signal of the feedback is positive, then the mechanism that includes the marine organisms, the sulphur compounds and the clouds, is not of control, but of amplification. This means that the more DMS is released by the marine organisms, the more clouds are formed over the oceans. In sum, empirical data obtained since the proposal of the CLAW hypothesis do not point to a single direction, pro or con the hypothesis. The consequence is that even central features, such as whether the signal of the feedback is negative or positive, are still open issues. In fact, it was not possible to adequately test the CLAW hypothesis up to the present, despite its impact on research about the process of cloud formation and its relationship with the global climate, and, consequently, its potential role in the construction of a scientific understanding of the Earth system. The reason lies in the overall complexity of the atmospheric and oceanic processes involved in the proposed feedback mechanisms and, also, in the lack of understanding about several aspects of DMS oxidation in the atmosphere (Ayers & Cainey, 2007; Vallina et al., 2007; Malin, 2006; Andreae & Crutzen, 1997). For the sake of our argument, however, it is a secondary issue whether the CLAW hypothesis will be maintained or refuted by the scientific community. This is an empirical issue, which will be solved in its due course. What most interests us here is the capacity shown by the proposals of Lovelock et al. (1972) and Charlson et al. (1987) of generating new predictions and research questions. The pioneering studies of these authors gave origin to a whole new area of research, known as the ‘cloud-algae link’, which shows a strongly interdisciplinary character, congregating researchers from a variety of disciplinary fields, such as geochemistry, geophysics, biogeochemistry, climatology, meteorology, taxonomy, oceanography, ecology and evolutionary biology, who work in close collaboration. There are reasons to think that, despite the uncertainties that surround it and the necessity of proper empirical testing, the CLAW hypothesis was able to point out to elements that are likely to play a role in future models of the global climate, even if these models come to diverge substantially from the specific content of that hypothesis. Micro- and macroalgae, for instance, are likely to take part in the climate system, since they are, as the CLAW hypothesis proposes, a source of chemical substances involved in the formation of CCN, without which there would be no clouds (Ayers & Cainey, 2007). Christner et al. (2008) also highlight that aerosols produced by living organisms (mainly bacterial plant pathogens and other microorganisms) are ubiquitous and constitute the major source of active particles that induce the formation of clouds, particularly at high temperatures. In order to properly understand what is proposed by the CLAW hypothesis (and, for that matter, also by the Gaia research programme as a whole), it is important to bear in mind that the production of DMS by phytoplanktonic organisms (especially prymnesiophytes and dinoflagellates) and other organisms of the marine biota, cannot and should not be interpreted as some act of global altruism, with the alleged purpose of keeping Earth temperature at adequate values to the survival of all the biota. First, consider that the algae synthesize only DMSP. The synthesis of DMSP, the precursor compound of DMS, has metabolic costs for the algae and, thus, in order to explain how the metabolic pathways leading to DMSP synthesis 8 Nei Freitas Nunes-Neto, Ricardo Santos do Carmo and Charbel Niño El-Hani evolved, we need to consider benefits for the algae themselves, which should more than compensate for those costs, indeed increasing the fitness of the organisms exhibiting them. In these terms, the influence of DMS over the global climate would be just a by-product of biochemical mechanisms evolved as a consequence of their contribution to the fitness of the individual algae, despite its overall importance to the rest of the biota. Accordingly, we have now evidence that DMSP plays at least four roles in algae physiology: (1) it is a solute that contributes to the cell’s osmotic equilibrium (Vairavamurthy et al., 1985; Kirst, 1996; Stefels, 2000); (2) it is an antioxidant (Sunda et al., 2002); (3) it is an inhibitor of cysteine and methionine, by means of an overflow mechanism1 (see Stefels, 2000); and (4) it is a mediator of chemical information involved in interactions with predators (Steinke et al., 2002; Stefels, 2000; Wolfe et al., 1997). These four physiological functions are important for the reproductive success of the algae, and, thus, explain why DMSP synthesis was selected for, and, consequently, DMS came to be released, as a by-product, by the algae, and could give rise to the feedback mechanisms proposed by the CLAW hypothesis. For a further discussion about the evolutionary treatment of DMSP metabolism and its implications to cloud nucleation, within the framework of Gaia, we refer the reader to Hamilton and Lenton (1998). We will now move on to discuss how the CLAW hypothesis and the emergence of the cloud-algae link research area show the scientific status of the Gaia research programme, by treating them as progressive problemshifts in the sense of Lakatos’ theory of science. But first, in the next section, we will briefly explain some central ideas of this theory of science. 3. LAKATOS’ THEORY OF SCIENCE AND THE CLAW HYPOTHESIS AS A PROGRESSIVE PROBLEMSHIFT IN THE GAIA RESEARCH PROGRAMME2 The methodology of scientific research programmes, developed by the Hungarian philosopher of science and mathematics Imre Lakatos, represents an important step toward the goal of philosophy of science to solve – or dissolve – the “demarcation problem”. This is the problem of how to distinguish science from pseudoscience, following Popper’s terminology (1974, p. 35). To solve the demarcation problem, according to Popper, we need to establish a criterion to distinguish, on the one hand, empirical sciences, and, on the other, mathematics, logics, and metaphysics. In Popper’s view, this problem is the source of almost all other problems in the theory of knowledge and, by this very reason, is central to philosophy of science. 1 2 Stefels (2000) proposes the hypothesis that DMSP production is an overflow mechanism for excess reduced compounds and, indeed, for every energy excess. An overflow mechanism is a reaction of the cell to a condition of unbalanced growth. Compounds are produced and discarded in order to ensure the continuation of other metabolic pathways. The continued production of DMSP keeps cysteine and methionine concentrations at a low level. One advantage of this inhibition of methionine and cysteine is that it allows continued sulphate assimilation even under nitrogen-limited conditions. Here, we are following Hacking (1983), who uses “programme” to indicate scientific research programmes as treated in Lakatos’ theory, rather than “program”, a word with a wider and not a very precise meaning. Lakatos himself uses the word “programme”. Relationships between Marine Phytoplankton, Dimethylsulphide and the Climate… 9 Although other philosophers of science have dedicated themselves to the problem of demarcation, it was Popper who built the argument that the progress of science is fundamentally based on a rigid strategy or rational method. This is tipically represented by a set of well defined rules. Grounded on these assumptions, Popper formulates its theory of science, known as Popperian falsificationism, and his criterion to distinguish science from non-science, i.e., his demarcation criterion. Popperian falsificationism, elaborated from such a rationalist perspective, was criticized by Kuhn (1996) in the context of his own theory of science. Put in simple terms, one reason that opposes Kuhn to such rationalist thesis is that, for him, other factors, besides the cognitive ones, play crucial roles in the development of scientific knowledge, or in the rejection or acceptance of a given theory by scientists. In other words, for Kuhn, it is not only the relationship between theory and the empirical world that matters to the genesis and development of scientific knowledge. Other very important factors concern the sociological and historical aspects of the scientific community and, furthermore, the wider social community in which scientific practice is embedded. These factors are not, in Kuhn’s view, adequately taken into account from a Popperian perspective. Lakatos himself, even though a follower of Popper, recognizes the relevance of this criticism, but argues that there is more than such a naive perspective in Popper’s writings. For him, there was a Popper1, a Popper2 and a Popper3, this sequence denoting increasingly sophisticated versions of the Popperian doctrine. The more sophisticated version was called by Lakatos (1978) “sophisticated methodological falsificationism”, which was the starting point of his “methodology of scientific research programmes”. Just like Popper, Lakatos assumes that scientific change is a rational process. For him, Kuhn proposes that “scientific change is a kind of religious change” (Lakatos, 1978, p. 9) or mob psychology. In Lakatos’ view, scientific change must be governed by rules and the central problem of philosophy of science would be to make explicit the universal conditions under which a theory can be taken as scientific (Lakatos, 1978). In this sense, Lakatos rejected the relativist position, according to which there would be no logical universal criterion to prescribe the decisions made by the scientists on what theory to choose. But, ironically, Lakatos himself was not able to provide elements for the scientists to judge what theories to choose. His theory of science was backward-, not forward-looking. In other words, all Lakatos can offer – as said by his critics (e.g., Feyerabend, 1993) – is a model for historical rational reconstructions of the past of a given research programme, not clues to scientists to choose a theory to be accepted henceforth. However, it is possible to argue that this is not necessarily a flaw of Lakatos’ theory, as Ian Hacking (1983) pointed out and we will explain later. It was important for Lakatos to offer a rationalist theory of science, because to judge a theory based on the number, faith or vocal energy of its partisans was, in his view, to accept that truth is derived merely from power (Lakatos, 1978). The fact that Lakatos adopted this perspective was partly derived from his own political experience during the World War II, in Hungary, where he was chased by the Nazi regime (Larvor, 1998, p. 2). Lakatos’ theory differs from methodological falsificationist views which are rather naïve, in the sense that they accept that a single counterevidence could be enough to falsify a theory. He observed that this was not even a necessary condition for science to grow, because “no experiment, experimental report, observation statement or well-corroborated low-level falsifying hypothesis alone can lead to falsification” (Lakatos, 1978, p. 35). According to him, 10 Nei Freitas Nunes-Neto, Ricardo Santos do Carmo and Charbel Niño El-Hani no falsification of a given theory takes place before another, better theory is available. This means that falsification does not occur only because of a simple relationship between theory and empirical data. Instead, it occurs because of the confrontation between rival theories, even when empirical data also plays a role in theory change. In these terms, it is necessary to the falsification of a theory T the proposition of an alternative theory, T’, which (i) has exceeding empirical content3 with regard to T; (ii) explains the non-refuted content of T, and (iii) has at least part of its exceeding content corroborated (Lakatos, 1978, p. 32). In these terms, theory appraisal should necessarily take into account how theories are modified during the historical process of their development. Here, we have to appreciate how Lakatos uses the terms ‘theory’ and ‘research programme’. For this philosopher, a research programme is a set of interconnected theories, which follow one another. These different theories are gathered in a single research programme due to a set of shared propositions, which constitute, in Lakatos’ terms, the hard core of the programme. These propositions amount to a set of commitments assumed by the scientists working in a given programme, which should not be rejected or modified for methodological reasons, since they provide the grounds to the growth of knowledge within that research programme. Another important notion in Lakatos’ theory of science will be central to our arguments here, namely, that of a ‘progressive problemshift’. The discovery of improbable facts under the light of new theories included in a research programme is regarded by Lakatos as a theoretically progressive problemshift. These facts amount to an exceeding empirical content, which, when corroborated, at least in part, by research oriented by the programme, leads to an empirically progressive problemshift. The research programme that shows such progressive problemshifts is, in turn, regarded as progressive in Lakatos’ theory, and this is what allows us to demarcate it as scientific. Otherwise, it is a degenerating programme, at risk of losing its scientific status. This view results from Lakatos’ assumption that the most basic and important characteristic of scientific knowledge is that it has to grow, and, more than that, it should be pregnant with the seeds of its own growth. It is clear from the above account of progressive problemshifts in a research programme that the corroboration of exceeding empirical content is more important than falsification in Lakatos’ theory of science (see Lakatos, 1978, p. 36). Furthermore, in this account of science, verification and falsification of propositions are not important in themselves. Their importance has to be established, always, with regard to other propositions, which can be bold or cautious. The verification of a well-supported, cautious scientific proposition or the falsification of a proposition that is completely new does not contribute to the growth of knowledge. In turn, the falsification of well-supported propositions and the verification of bold statements predicting novel facts indeed contribute to the growth of knowledge. In these cases, the scientific community may be led to abandon well-established knowledge, replacing it by a potentially more powerful or promising alternative, which may become the new established scientific content (Chalmers, 1999). Lakatos gives the concept of ‘heuristic’ a central place in his theory (see Lakatos, 1978, p. 47), inspired by the works of his mentor and countryman, the mathematician Georg Polya (Hacking, 1983). Research programmes are characterized in terms of a negative and a positive heuristic. It is the negative heuristic that determines a hard core, a set of 3 By ‘exceeding empirical content’, Lakatos means that the alternative theory predicts “some novel, hitherto unexpected fact” (Lakatos, 1978, p. 33). Relationships between Marine Phytoplankton, Dimethylsulphide and the Climate… 11 proposititions that are accepted by the scientists involved in a research programme as methodologically unfalsifiable. This methodological decision allows that, on the grounds of a number of central propositions, a research programme grows, leading to progressive problemshifts. To keep the integrity of the hard core of a programme, scientists make changes in a set of auxiliary hypotheses and observational methods, which Lakatos calls the protective belt. The protective belt has the function of protecting the hard core, supporting the impact of empirical tests. As such, it should be adjusted, readjusted and even replaced, when necessary (Lakatos, 1978, p. 48). Indications about how to build, change and develop the protective belt constitute the positive heuristic of the programme (Lakatos, 1978, p. 50). When the protective belt is well-developed, there is a greater tendency that its modifications lead to the discovery of novel facts, contributing to the progress of a research programme, and, thus, to its scientific status. As we said above, Lakatos’ theory has been criticized on the grounds that it only looked backward, not forward. That is, it could offer a historical reconstruction of the past, but not precise clues for scientists to make decisions about keeping or discarding a given theory. In our view, this is undoubtedly a problem for Lakatos’ original goal of providing rationalist criteria for theory change. His methodology of scientific research programmes was simply not capable of providing such criteria. But Hacking (1983) offers us a more positive appraisal of Lakatos’ theory, focusing on what this theory can contribute to our efforts to understand the growth of scientific knowledge. We agree that this theory can help in such efforts, even though it may not fulfill Lakatos’ own expectations and intentions. Hacking says that, looking backward, Lakatos offers an analysis of how we got here; he contributes to our understanding of how we arrived at a given understanding of the natural world. He adds, indeed, to our understanding of the very search for objectivity in science, something that can be taken as part of the duty of philosophy of science. As to theory choice, it has been increasingly accepted in the last three decades of science studies that it is not an entirely rational process, crucially depending on sociohistorical circumstances both internal and external to the scientific community. Here, we make use of Lakatos’ theory of science precisely to build such a retrospective understanding of how we moved from the problem of the intermediary in the sulphur cycle in the early 1970s to the CLAW hypothesis, as part of the Gaia research programme, and after to the current state of knowledge about the relationships between planktonic food web, cloud formation, and the global climate. The analysis of this movement also allows us to advance a discussion about the scientific status of Gaia itself. Since it was proposed, around the end of the 1960s (see Lovelock & Giffin, 1969), Gaia was harshly criticized by the scientific community. Its scientific status was put into question (Kirchner, 1989, 1993) and it was even cited as an example of antiscience or pseudoscience (Postgate, 1988). Since the end of the 1980s and along the 1990s, the Gaia research programme became more accepted by the scientific community. The increasing acceptance of Gaia was mainly a result of two important advances – the Daisyworld model (Watson and Lovelock, 1983; Lenton and Lovelock, 2000) and the CLAW hypothesis. Today, Gaia is more accepted and indeed offered a substantial contribution to the development of the new field of Earth System Science (for commentaries on this issue, see Jacobson et al., 2000; Margulis, 2004; Tickell, 2004; Nunes-Neto, 2008; Carmo et al., in press). 12 Nei Freitas Nunes-Neto, Ricardo Santos do Carmo and Charbel Niño El-Hani The central thesis of the Gaia research programme – its hard core – is the idea that Earth exhibits a cybernetic system involving the biota and the physicochemical environment in close interaction. These cybernetic interactions include both positive and negative feedback loops, and result in a dynamical regulation of some important environmental variables, which are kept in this manner in a range that makes Earth inhabitable by living beings. In our view, it is this idea, and not that of a living Earth, the most important, central claim of Gaia (e.g. Lima-Tavares & El-Hani, 2001; Lima-Tavares, 2002; Nunes-Neto & El-Hani, 2006; NunesNeto, 2008; Guimarães et al., 2008; Carmo et al., in press). An examination of the CLAW hypothesis and the cloud-algae link research area can contribute to establish the scientific status of the Gaia research programme. In the context of Lakatos’ theory, this can be done by showing that this hypothesis amounted to a progressive problemshift in the understanding of the sulphur cycle, leading to an increase of the empirical content of Gaia. Initially, the problem faced in models of the sulphur cycle was: What is the intermediary chemical compound responsible for the transfer of sulphur from the oceans to the land surface? To answer this question, it was necessary to elaborate a mechanism of sulphur transference to continental environments. The assumptions about the role of living beings in the cycles of chemical elements on Earth, which are an integral part of the Gaia research programme, underlie Lovelock and colleagues’ approach to this problem. Thus, in 1972, Lovelock and colleagues advanced the testable hypothesis that DMS was the compound responsible for transferring sulphur from oceans to land. This proposal was well corroborated by subsequent studies, as we saw above, and led to the proposition in 1987 of the CLAW hypothesis, by Charlson and colleagues. This hypothesis not only advanced our understanding of the sulphur cycle, but also proposed a completely new – and at that time unexpected – relationship among phytoplankton (and, generally speaking, the marine food web), volatile compounds of sulphur, clouds, and the global climate. The proposition of this hypothesis opened up a whole new set of questions to be investigated by scientists from several fields, such as marine ecology, atmospheric chemistry, climatology, among others. From this positive heuristic of the Gaia programme, an entirely new research field emerged, the cloudalgae link. Based on these considerations, we can say that Lovelock and colleagues’ investigations about the sulphur cycle and, in particular, the CLAW hypothesis show a remarkable exceeding empirical content. Moreover, it is important to notice that part of this exceeding content was indeed corroborated, as discussed in section 2. It is quite clear, then, that these achievements concerning the sulphur cycle can be interpreted as a theoretical and empirical progressive problemshift in the Gaia research programme, contributing to its scientific status. 4. SOME IMPLICATIONS OF THE CLAW HYPOTHESIS Lovelock and Rapley (2007), in a recent letter to Nature, proposed a geoengineering mechanism in order to mitigate the effects of global warming. This mechanism is grounded on the CLAW hypothesis, since it is related to the contributions of algae to the increase of atmospheric DMS and CO2 capture. The authors proposed to build a “free-floating or tethered vertical pipes to increase the mixing of nutrient-rich waters below the thermocline with the Relationships between Marine Phytoplankton, Dimethylsulphide and the Climate… 13 relatively barren waters at the ocean surface” (Lovelock & Rapley, 2007, p. 403). These pipes would have to be 100 to 200 meters long, 10 meters in diameter, and would pump the deep waters to the surface. Since deep waters are richer in nutrients, this pumping would offer an extra amount of food to the algae. As a consequence, they would release more DMS and this would lead, in turn, to the production of more clouds. Moreover, the algae would capture more CO2 from the atmosphere. These activities would contribute, then, to cool the planet. Indeed, as Jones and Gabric (2006, p. 28) suggested, DMS can be treated, if the CLAW hypothesis is correct, as a “negative greenhouse gas”. If its atmospheric concentration was doubled, this might lead to a cooling of the planetary surface in up to 1.3 ºC. According to Lovelock and Rapley (2007), although there are risks involved in this geoengineering approach, we need urgently to stimulate the Earth system to regulate its temperature. In their own words, “the removal of 500 gigatonnes of carbon dioxide from the air by human endeavour is beyond our current technological capability. If we can’t ‘heal the planet’ directly, we may be able to help the planet to heal itself” (Lovelock & Rapley, 2007, p. 403). Lovelock and Rapley’s letter was commented by Shepherd et al. (2007) in the subsequent issue of Nature. According to them, the geoengineering approach proposed by Lovelock and Rapley “… might cause, not cure, problems” (Shepherd et al., 2007, p. 781). Their arguments are based on previous studies showing that, although some initial increase in the biomass of producers would happen, this would not lead to the sequestration of carbon into the deep ocean (below 1,000 meters), which is essential if the carbon dioxide captured is to be isolated from the atmosphere for centuries or longer. Furthermore, we should notice that, when phytoplanktonic organisms died, carbon would be released back to the oceans and, consequently, to the atmosphere through ventilation. After death, the phytoplanktonic organisms would sink and their captured carbon molecules would be rapidly degraded by respiration and mostly remineralized within the upper ocean. As a consequence, it is likely, according to Shepherd et al. (2007), that almost all the CO2 taken up through the increased algal metabolism would be released back to the atmosphere within a year. Moreover, we cannot lose from sight that interventions in poorly known ecosystems, such as the marine ones, could cause great and unforeseen damages, for instance, by changing the trophic structure in such a manner that the resulting problems could outweigh the potential benefits. However, interventions in the Earth system such as those proposed by Lovelock and Rapley (2007) are not the only way to derive contributions from researches on the cloud-algae link to mitigate the effects of the current climate change. Indeed, a more interesting – and safer! – contribution should be emphasized. It simply consists in emphasizing the role of life on Earth, recognizing living beings as central players in the biogeochemical cycles and the process of climate change. The CLAW hypothesis and the studies developed thenceforth showed, since the end of 1980s, the great complexity of the biogeochemical cycles. It is also clear that living beings should not be treated as secondary factors, but, rather, as critical elements in models about the climate and its changes. Algae, for instance, capture CO2 and release DMS and O2, quite important substances with regard to the climate dynamics. Models that do not take in due account the role of the phytoplankton and the other components of the marine biota in the global dynamics of climate are not only oversimplified models of the 14 Nei Freitas Nunes-Neto, Ricardo Santos do Carmo and Charbel Niño El-Hani Earth System, but mistaken representations of this very system4. Works recently done on climate modeling pointed to the importance of adequately incorporating the role of organisms in the construction of the physicochemical environment (e.g. Iglesias-Rodríguez et al., 2002; Moore et al., 2004; Iglesias-Rodríguez et al., 2008). As Ayers and Cainey (2007) argue, the report of the Working Group I of the IPCC (International Panel on Climate Change), published in February 2007 (see IPCC, 2007), does not take into account the CLAW hypothesis and neglect the importance of the biological generation of clouds. Nevertheless, it is clear that both micro- and macro-algae play a key role in the climate system by providing precursor gases for CCN, without which there would be no clouds (Ayers & Cainey, 2007). 5. CONCLUDING REMARKS In this chapter, we argued for the importance of investigations about the cloud-algae link to the understanding of global ecological processes, such as the biogeochemical cycles and climate changes. The CLAW hypothesis and the cloud-algae link research area offer important lessons to the current science of climate change. Based on Lakatos’ theory of science, we argued that this hypothesis amounts to a progressive problemshift in the Gaia scientific research program. The CLAW hypothesis offers a systemic approach of global phenomena and has become part of the scientific conventional knowledge in what is known today as ‘Earth System Science’ (Kump et al., 1999; Jacobson et al., 2000). In the face of the current environmental crisis, such an approach is indispensable, since climate changes are not spatially localized, but are both affected by and affect the entire Earth system. Many of the sociopolitical actions related to the issue of climate change are based on models that need to consider the role of living systems in the construction of the physicochemical environment. This role has already been recognized in the study of the biogeochemical cycles, but has not been adequately incorporated into the modeling of the planetary climate up to the present. The CLAW hypothesis and the cloud-algae link research area contribute to fulfill this requirement, since they address the interconnections among living and non-living components in the sulphur and water cycles. Moreover, we should point here to another very important contribution of the CLAW hypothesis to the construction of scientific knowledge, namely, that it offers a good example of successful integration of biological subdisciplines related to ecological systems, such as marine ecology, biogeochemistry, evolutionary biology, and cell physiology. This is indeed one of the main goals assumed by contemporary ecologists and philosophers of ecology. Moreover, the scientific trend resulting from the proposition of the CLAW hypothesis led to even greater integration of scientific knowledge, since it involved not only fields of biology, but also other scientific disciplines, such as atmospheric chemistry, geophysics, climatology, etc. Greater integration in science is a sine qua non condition to deal effectively with complex problems such as global warming. Disciplinary science has made its contribution to provide 4 In different degrees, all models are, of course, simplified representations of some system. However, the point here has to do with the degree in which some crucial elements are adequately incorporated into the model. What we have in view here is the question of the significance of the models to the generation of reliable scientific knowledge and sound sociopolitical decisions based on this knowledge. 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