RT Journal Article T1 Population dynamics of synthetic terraformation motifs. A1 Solé, Ricard V. A1 Montañez, Raúl A1 Durán-Nebreda, Salva A1 Rodríguez-Amor, Daniel A1 Sardanyés, Josep K1 Ecología K1 Ingeniería ambiental K1 Cambios climáticos AB Ecosystems are complex systems, currently experiencing several threats associated with global warming, intensive exploitation and human-driven habitat degradation. Because of a general presence of multiple stable states, including states involving population extinction, and due to the intrinsic nonlinearities associated with feedback loops, collapse in ecosystems could occur in a catastrophic manner. It has been recently suggested that a potential path to prevent or modify the outcome of these transitions would involve designing synthetic organisms and synthetic ecological interactions that could push these endangered systems out of the critical boundaries. In this paper, we investigate the dynamics of the simplest mathematical models associated with four classes of ecological engineering designs, named Terraformation motifs (TMs). These TMs put in a nutshell different ecological strategies. In this context, some fundamental types of bifurcations pervade the systems' dynamics. Mutualistic interactions can enhance persistence of the systems by means of saddle-node bifurcations. The models without cooperative interactions show that ecosystems achieve restoration through transcritical bifurcations. Thus, our analysis of the models allows us to define the stability conditions and parameter domains where these TMs must work. PB The Royal Society YR 2018 FD 2018-07-04 LK https://hdl.handle.net/10630/35326 UL https://hdl.handle.net/10630/35326 LA eng NO This study was supported by a European Research Council Advanced Grant (SYNCOM), by the Botin Foundation, by Banco Santander through its Santander Universities Global Division, by grant FIS2015-67616-P, by the PR01018-EC-H2020-FET-Open MADONNA project and by the Santa Fe Institute. This work has also counted with the support of Secretaria d’Universitats i Recerca del Departament d’Economia i Coneixement de la Generalitat de Catalunya. J.S. has been also partially funded by a ‘Ramón y Cajal’ Fellowship (RYC-2017-22243) and by the CERCA Programme of the Generalitat de Catalunya. The research leading to these results has received funding from ‘la Caixa’ Foundation. DS RIUMA. Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad de Málaga RD 12 abr 2026