Yes, it is addressed at both Genesis 1:28 and repeated again at Genesis 9:1.Birth and death are both necessary if we are to live in a finite world. If we reproduce and don't die, eventually the world fills up with humans (and animals, but lets keep it simple) and we are all standing shoulder to shoulder on the dry land. That's obvious from a naturalistic pov, but what about Biblically?
If Adam and Eve had never "fallen" they could either have had children or not. If not, there would only have been two humans for ever, which doesn't seem to have been God's plan. If they did have children and remained immortal, we have the population problem that I outlined above. There seems therefore to have been a necessity for God to have introduced death regardless of the fall.
How does the Bible address this, if it does?
People were to only reproduce until Earth was full, til Earth was populated. Not over-full. Nor over-populated.
In other words, Earth was formed to be inhabited, Not over-inhabited - Isaiah 45:18
Once paradisical Eden was expanded and spread out world wide then reproduction would cease.
As to what is God's purpose after that remained to be seen. After all there is a whole universe out there.
Those of us who are around after the end of Jesus' coming 1,000 year reign over Earth will have all the details at that time.