Noted biologist and author John Tyler Bonner has experimented
with cellular slime molds for more than sixty years, and he has
done more than anyone else to raise these peculiar collections of
amoebae from a minor biological curiosity to a major model
organism--one that is widely studied for clues to the development
and evolution of all living things. Now, five decades after he
published his first pioneering book on cellular slime molds, Bonner
steps back from the proliferating and increasingly specialized
knowledge about the organism to provide a broad, nontechnical
picture of its whole biology, including its evolution,
sociobiology, ecology, behavior, and development. "The Social
Amoebae" draws the big lessons from decades of research, and shows
how slime molds fit into and illuminate biology as a whole.
Slime molds are very different from other organisms; they feed
as individual amoebae before coming together to form a
multicellular organism that has a remarkable ability to move and
orient itself in its environment. Furthermore, these social amoebae
display a sophisticated division of labor; within each organism,
some cells form the stalk and others become the spores that will
seed the next generation. In "The Social Amoebae," Bonner examines
all these parts together, giving a balanced, concise, and clear
overview of slime mold biology, from molecules to cells to
multicells, as he advances some unconventional and unexpected
insights.
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