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In the introduction she lays out her philosophy about life on earth, for which she was roundly criticized by many reductionist scientists. In the past, she writes, all life on Earth was traditionally studied as being merely a prelude to the appearance of humans. Now, overwhelming evidence suggests that microbes (one-celled organisms) not only inhabit every known living thing on earth, they are also indispensable to the survival of all living things. They, not human beings, are the most important beings on the planet.
Furthermore, in opposition to one of the most accepted tenets of Neo-Darwinism, Margulis states that life did not colonize the planet by competition so much as by networking. Cooperation between one-celled creatures led, over billions of years, to the evolution of beings such as ourselves, who possess the capability for self-conscious awareness. Our human consciousness, of which we are so proud, "may have been born of the concerted capacities of millions of microbes that evolved symbiotically to become the human brain."
Strong words! Yet, Margulis sets forth compelling evidence in the remainder of her book to support her bio-philosophical ideas. Along the way, we learn many amazing things. For instance, we get a perspective on what upstart newcomers we are: the continents we inhabit now appeared in their present locations only in the last tenth of a percent of Earth's history. We learn that bacteria invented genetic engineering. Thus, when ultraviolet light damaged early microbes' DNA, the creatures produced repair enzymes to remove the damaged portions and copy new replacement DNA. This is a natural form of gene splicing.
Sometimes, the DNA used in gene splicing was borrowed from neighboring bacteria of different strains, thus affording these critters a prodigious adaptability. This borrowing still goes on today. Through intermediaries, two very different bacteria can share genetic information. Why is this important? Because it allows the distribution of genetic information in the microcosm with a speed "approaching that of modern telecommunications--if the complexity and biological value of the information being transferred is factored in." This speed makes bacteria the biosphere's first responders in dealing with planetary changes.
In responding to change, bacteria end up altering and shaping their environments. Few people realize that the entire earth's atmosphere, which we depend on for our life's breath, was created, and is maintained, by microbes. This is a good thing to remember next time you feel like spraying down your bathroom or kitchen with anti-microbial spray. Our fear of bacteria is misplaced. Yes, some are harmful to us, but most are beneficial. Indeed they are a lot more helpful to us than we are to the rest of the planet!
This book isn't an easy read, but it will broaden one's outlook on our place in the natural world. Even if bacteria are not in the end responsible for the intricacies of our human brain and consciousness, we still owe them many debts. This book unveils the smallness of humans before the vast and minute workings of nature, and encourages a sense of humility before the greater Life that surrounds us.
For a reason I can't recall, I was hurrying through the stacks of the U. of Rochester Medical School Library in the very early 1970's. The title on the spine of one book happened to catch my eye, The Origin of Eukaryotic Cells. I didn't know what eukaryotic cells were. Impulsively, I took the book out and read a bit of it while standing in the stacks. Then I decided to check it out of the library. Over the next two weeks I read the whole book very carefully. I had very little scientific background, but I did remember that when I took freshman biology in 1953-54 at the U. of R. I thought that it looked to me as if parts of more complex single-celled microbes were, in fact, simpler microbes that had somehow gotten inside the more complex cells and stayed there.
This book confirmed that idea, and it changed my life because it renewed my interest in evolution. I began reading a great deal about it. I still read a lot about evolution. I've just finished reading Lynn Margulis' most recent book, Acquiring Genomes, written with Dorion Sagan, also more than just a good read. Both books advance the concept of symbiosis as a major cause of evolutionary change. They specify, by giving the details, one very important way, perhaps the most important way, in which evolution can occur in leaps and bounds rather than soley by the long-term acquisition of genetic mutations.
Anyone with a deep interest in evolution ought to read The Origin of Eukaryotic Cells. And perhaps they should buy up extant copies of it to pass on to their descendants as an investment.
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However, this is more than simply a collection of illustrative examples of various organisms. The most fascinating chapter relates the authors' proposal to modify one of the standard classifications of life - the Protoctists, replacing Whittiker's Protists. "The Kingdom Protoctista is defined by exclusion," they state. "Its members are neither animals, plants, fungi nor procaryotes." Their common characteristics are nucleated cells, some kind of flagellum and live in an oxygenated atmosphere [unlike many unicellular forms which cannot tolerate oxygen. Their argument contends that many multicellular forms are more
directly related to these unicellular forms than they are to other multi-celled organisms. The new classification "also solves the problem of blurred boundaries that arises if the unicellular organisms are assigned to the multicellular kingdoms." They list 27 phyla [of 36 total]with diagrams exhibiting a range of bizarre structures and life cycles.
Another noteworthy entry is Trichoplax adhaerens. Remember the name of this creature - "it is the simplest of animals." Composed of but a few thousand cells, it is a dull gray body just visible to the unaided eye. In looking at the photo and diagram of this creature invokes a sense of wonder - this is, after all, a distance relative living in the nearest aquarium with the shad.
This book is a delight to browse following one of the authors' intents. Their second purpose, using this book as a reference, is even more admirably met. Clear photographs coupled with excellent diagrams, including typical environments of the selected specimens, add visual support to a readable text base. Any reader interested in the way life is structured and seeking insights into evolutionary development would do well to consider this book. It's not an academic text, but conveys a wealth of meaningful information.
I know that when I was reading through the section detailing the Animal phylla, I was struck by how many creatures -- entire phyllums -- get along without even rudimentary brains (or digestive systems, respiratory systems, circulatory systems, or even organs, altogether, in some cases). Likewise I was surprised to learn that only two phylla (including our own) ever developed winged flight.
The sections comprising the non-Animal kingdoms were of particular interest to me mainly for the simple reason that they invariably get little attention from most texts. At best, you'll usally find a chapter dealing with micro-organisms as a whole, and a brief chapter on plants. To see how much sheer diverity there is in just the Fungus kingdom is eye-opening.
I will note that the book does assume a basic level of biological literacy and that it sometimes throws jargon at the reader with little warning or explaination but, as a whole, this is a very accessible work and well worth having on one's shelf.
Most of us think of evolution as darwinian survival of the fittest, with cheetahs and gazelles in a competitive arms race for survival. This book more accurately portrays selective mechanisms as predominately cooperative and microbially based. Certainly we would not be here to contemplate at all were it not for our ancestor bacteria, and this mocrobial history is written into our very genome. Approximately 5 % of our genome is putatively defunct viruses for example.
Chapter 2 is a pretty good synopsis of prebiotic chemistry. Chapter 4 gives a good definition on the disparateness between sex and reproduction. Chapter 5 shows how bacteria are essentially one ubiquitous species that casually transfer genes horizontally. Chapter 10 gives a great account of meiosis and mitosis and their permutations in the two biological domains, as well as fairly debunking the notion that the value of sex is its superior ability to offer genetic variability over fissioning prokaryotes. In Chaper 11 she gives a good account of how plants and animals (veritable colonies of bacteria) came to colonize the land on earth. Humans enter the scene in chapter 12 via neotony. The last chapter, chapter 13, goes out on a variety of speculative limbs in conclusion.
While this book contains its share of factual errors, probably due to its age, its a well crafted popsci book that makes geotemporal biology accessible to the lay reader.
For those of you who don't know, Lyn Margulis is the ex wife of the late Carl Sagan (prior to Ayn Druian) and Ms. Margulis is Dorian Sagan's mother.Together, they make an excellent writing team.
Margulis and Sagan relegate Darwin to a secondary place within the order of things: the most powerful and important changes in evolution happen not through mutation - as Darwin would have it - but through symbiosis, '...the merging of organisms into new collectives, proves to be a major power of change on Earth.' In particular oxygen-breathing bacteria merged with other organisms to enable oxygen-based life on the once alien surface of this hydrogen filled planet. 'The symbiotic process goes on unceasingly.' 'Fully ten percent of our own dry body weight consists of bacteria - some of which.... we cannot live without.' That's an estimation of ten thousand billion bacteria each!
Imagine a droplet of water with a membrane holding the water in place and allowing certain nutrients in. This is a simplified description of how it is imagined the first becteria came into being. The book offers a fascinating history of the evolution of life on our planet. This is a wonderful story full of fantastic developments spanning thousands of millions of years. Every now and then we are reminded by the authors that none of it could have taken place or could be happening now were it not for the metabolic abilities of bacteria. It gives a really eye-opening account of bacterial sex with the insight that all bacteria, all over the planet, are really part of one organism because they are all able to exchange genetic information. For instance it's thought that bacteria obtained their now well-known resistence to penicillen from their bacterial cousins in the soil. But also, you begin to get the impression that perhaps it's the bacteria which have used every means possible and are now using us too to spread onto the land and all over the planet and beyond from their original wet home in the ocean. Humans are defintely relegated to a secondary place within something much, much bigger that is (consciously?) evolving.
This is a fascinating book which has radically changed the way I perceive life and the universe. I read it with great excitement and completed it with a new awe for those minute beings, the bacteria, which have, until now, had a very bad press. The best non-fiction book I've read this year.
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Beginning with the smallest organisms, bacteria, all the way to the largest, the planet Earth, Margulis charts the way from the beginnings of life to current day thinking in symbiotic biology. Symbiosis, which is the biological term for the intimate and mutually rewarding pairing of two kinds of organisms, is critical to evolution. A reknowned expert in both SET and Gaia theories, Lynn Margulis writes with authority and persuasion on the subjects she knows best. Interspersed in her account is the evolution of her own professional life which allows the reader a glimpse into her mind. Called "one of the most successful synthetic thinkers in modern biology", (E.O. Wilson) Margulis invites the reader to think about the world and our place in it in a totally new way.
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Her new book, Acquiring Genomes: A Theory of the Origins of Species, extends and deepens that argument. Margulis sets out to prove that new species rarely if ever appear as the result of mutation, isolation, genetic drift, or population bottlenecks--the meat and potatoes of neo-Darwinism. Instead she maintains that the major engine of evolutionary change, the source of most of the new forms that natural selection edits, is symbiogenesis--the acquisition of whole genomes as the result of symbiotic associations between different kinds of organisms. (Knowing that some people will seize on her thesis as an attack on the theory of evolution as a whole, Margulis makes it clear that she fully supports Darwin's great discovery of the mechanism of natural selection. She simply thinks that neo-Darwinists have failed to recognize the enormous creative power of genomic mergers.)
Readers who are familiar with Margulis' earlier works will recognize her vivid, personal and sometimes impressionistic writing style. I found this book, co-authored by her son, Dorion Sagan, to be clear and accessible. Starting with Chapter 9, where Margulis presents her latest ideas on the symbiotic origin of the nucleus itself, things get a bit more technical. Margulis makes every effort to help readers through the thicket of important, but at times tongue-twisting terms, and supplements explanations in the text with an excellent glossary. Margulis also presents the findings of several other researchers whose work supports or relates closely to her own.
Readers may or may not close the book convinced that Margulis is right and the neo-Darwinists are wrong. But they will come away with a vastly deeper understanding of the pervasive nature and power of the microbial world, and of symbiosis. Margulis reveals a hidden side of nature, in which microbes have generated most if not all of life's metabolic machinery, in which vastly different life-forms consort in a myriad of ways, and in which the acquisition of entire genomes provides the raw material for great evolutionary leaps. Anyone with a deep interest in biology will gain important insights from "Acquiring Genomes."
Robert Adler, author of Science Firsts: From the Creation of Science to the Science of Creation (Wiley & Sons, 2002).
In the book, Sagan and Margulis outline their major objections with neo-darwinian orthodoxy: the notion of mutation and its inherent implications, and argue that its current role in theory is misguided and overemphasized. They argue, rightfully so, the concepts of symbiogenesis and Gaia give much better traction to explaining change from a procaryotic world to the current world of the living than the doctrines of neo-darwinian selection via mutation.
Margulis and Sagan give a interesting account, and more importantly, several detailed examples of symbiosis, where the genome has clearly changed. Whether or not one is familar with Margulis's work, the accounts are enlightening, although I wouldn't recommend this book as an introduction to Margulis's symbiosis and Gaia metaphors, it gives enough to wet the appetite for more. I would recommend Microcosmos as better introductory book to get a better glimpse of the scope and revolutionary nature of Margulis's ideas. If one is interested in other details, her other books, such as the Symbiotic Planet are worth reading.
Clearly the most important part of the book, besides a few more of her and Dorion's insights into Gaia, is the report on her latest publishable material on evidence of the steps from procaryotic to eucaryotic organisms. She concentrates more on her evidence for the first major symbiotic pairing (amitochondriates) which eventually leads to the mitosis and meiosis mechanisms. Her detailing of karyomastigont and akaryomastigont mechanisms and their relations, gives one a better understanding of some of the major steps that most likely occurred from the transition from gross bacterial genetic mechanisms (e.g., plasmids, bacteriophages, and conjugation) to the full blown eucaryotic mitosis and meiosis mechanisms. Obviously, despite their compelling evidence, there looks to be a great deal of work to done to fill in gaps between the connected dots. But Margulis and Sagan provide an entertaining and informative overview on some of the issues entailed in determining the details.
The book is a tantalizing look at the edge of science, for if one is informed, one can see some interesting signposts ahead. The only problem I have with the book is once you start looking beyond the edge, you realize indeed Margulis has only a few explorers with her, and they haven't gotten very far. But that's the nature of science, isn't it.