Animals and plants rule the world - or do they? A cup of seawater contains 100 million cells which are preyed upon by billions of viruses; a pinch of soil swarms with cryptic microbes whose activities are a mystery; 50 million tons of fungal spores are released into the atmosphere every year and affect the weather; and, human beings are mobile ecosystems that farm, and are farmed by, vast populations of bacteria and viruses involved with almost every aspect of our
wellbeing. These are the vast, unnoticed, unmentioned 'elephants in the room' of planet earth.The more we learn about microbial biodiversity, the less important do animals and
plants become in our understanding life on earth. The flowering of microbial science is revolutionizing biology and medicine in ways unimagined even a decade or two ago, and is inspiring a new view of what it means to be human. Nicholas P. money explores the extraordinary breadth of the microbial world and the vast swathes of biological diversity that are now becoming recognized using molecular methods. Money argues for nothing less than a revolution in our perception of the living world: the
big lumbering forms we see are just froth on a vast ocean of single-celled protists, bacteria, and viruses that constitute most of life on earth.
Animals and plants rule the world - or do they? A cup of seawater contains 100 million cells which are preyed upon by billions of viruses; a pinch of soil swarms with cryptic microbes whose activities are a mystery; 50 million tons of fungal spores are released into the atmosphere every year and affect the weather; and, human beings are mobile ecosystems that farm, and are farmed by, vast populations of bacteria and viruses involved with almost every aspect of our
wellbeing. These are the vast, unnoticed, unmentioned 'elephants in the room' of planet earth.The more we learn about microbial biodiversity, the less important do animals and
plants become in our understanding life on earth. The flowering of microbial science is revolutionizing biology and medicine in ways unimagined even a decade or two ago, and is inspiring a new view of what it means to be human. Nicholas P. money explores the extraordinary breadth of the microbial world and the vast swathes of biological diversity that are now becoming recognized using molecular methods. Money argues for nothing less than a revolution in our perception of the living world: the
big lumbering forms we see are just froth on a vast ocean of single-celled protists, bacteria, and viruses that constitute most of life on earth.
Preface
1: Eden
2: Lenses
3: Leviathan
4: Dirt and Water
5: Air
6: Naked Ape
7: Vulcan's Forge and Dante's Hell
8: New Jerusalem
Endnotes
Nicholas P. Money is Professor of Botany and Western Program
Director at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. He is the author of
more than 70 peer-reviewed papers on fungal biology and has
authored four books, including, Mr. Bloomfield's Orchard, The
Mysterious World of Mushrooms, Molds, and Mycologists (2002), and
Mushroom (2011) described by Nature magazine as a 'brilliant
scientific and cultural exploration' of his research
subject.
I found this book immensely enjoyable and I would encourage anyone
wanting to know more about the huge swathe of life on the planet
that passes us by unseen to seek out a copy.
*Dale Walters, The Biologist*
I found this bookimmensely enjoyable and I would encourage anyone
wanting to know more about the huge swathe of life on the planet
that passes us by unseen to seek out a copy. Indeed, I have
recommended it to my students an dit will be recommended reading
for one of my modules.
*The Biologist, Professor Dale Walters Cbiol FSB*
a fascinating reada beautifully written book
*The Biologist, Professor Dale Walters Cbiol FSB*
fascinating and often startlingly funny bookThis is a truly
revolutionary book that turns on its head the way we see the
world
*Robert Hanbury Tenison, Country Life*
Nicholas Money is an excellent guide
*Helen Bynum, Times Literary Supplement*
An impassioned fascination for microscopic life around and within
us...Overall, Money delivers a heady mixture of history,
philosophy, art and even poetry...This is a lucid and informative
book. There is an impressive afterword of references and notes, and
fine line drawings. So much that is lyrical and little-known waits
to be discovered here - novelties that will appeal to new
undergraduates as well as to incorrigible microbial enthusiasts
like myself.
*Mark O. Martin, Nature*
The world will not seem the same to anyone who reads his book.
*Helen Bynum, Times Literary Supplement*
[An] excellent introduction to modern microbiology.
*Science Uncovered*
Beautifully written ... Money has a great style, and a very
important message. To see what is really going on in the biosphere,
the only zone of life that we know of at this point, you need a
microscope. Bacteria are the gods of humans.
*The Stranger*
"Nicholas Money is an expert guide. This world will not seem the
same to anyone who reads his book."
*The Times Literary Supplement*
"This is a fascinating, amazing, and thoroughly enthusiastic sketch
of [the] subject . . . The book helps orient us to new biological
horizons - and new philosophic ones."
*The Ecologist*
"Written with great skill and seasoned with wit, the book displays
the expertise of the writer."
*San Francisco Book Review*
"Money succeeds, intellectually in convincing you that
multicellular creatures count for little in the grand scheme of
biology."
*The Wall Street Journal*
"Money's light-hearted writing helps prevent the lingo from
becoming overwhelming, though, and readers who can weather the
tricky language will find a fascinating and strange new world."
*Science News*
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