Honoring the fundamental role of microbes in the natural history of our planet
CONTACT: Courtenay S. Brown
202-942-9316
WASHINGTON,
DC – May 30, 2012 – Inspired by a 2009 colloquium on microbial evolution
convened at the Galapagos Islands, a new book from ASM Press, Microbes and Evolution: The World That
Darwin Never Saw celebrates Charles Darwin and his landmark publication On the Origin of Species. The editors compiled
40 first-person essays, written by microbiologists with a passion for
evolutionary biology, to illuminate how each scientist’s thinking and career
paths in science were influenced by Darwin’s seminal work.
Intended
for a general audience, Microbes and Evolution explores how the evidence
of microbial evolution deeply and personally affected each scientist. Readers can expect to be surprised and
delighted with these intimate viewpoints on the importance of evolutionary
principles in the study of a variety of aspects of life science, from taxonomy,
speciation, adaptation, social structure, and symbiosis to antibiotic
resistance, genetics, and genomics.
“Despite the political rhetoric about evolution, microbes
provide compelling examples of natural selection—examples that affect all of
our lives every day. We thought the best way to tell these stories was to ask
scientists who work in this field to share their discoveries in a way that
explains why they find microbial evolution exciting and important. And along
the way, they provide interesting insights into how they think about science,
revealing personalities that are as diverse as the microbes they study,” say
Roberto Kolter of Harvard Medical School who co-edited the book with Stanley
Maloy of San Diego State University.
"To
celebrate the anniversary of both Darwin’s birth and the publication of On the Origin of Species, a select group
of microbiologists met in the Galapagos Islands, bent on reconciling modern
microbiology with classical evolutionary theory. Their essays, born of this
historic gathering, appear here, each written in an erudite yet highly personal
style. Consequently, this book is not only highly informative, but a great deal
of fun to read. About half of them had something to say about Darwin; the other
half, what Darwin would have said about them," says Moselio Schaechter,
distinguished professor emeritus, Tufts University School of Medicine; adjunct
professor emeritus, Department of Biology, San Diego State University; and,
visiting scholar, University of California at San Diego.
Richard
Losick, Maria Moors Cabot Professor, at Harvard University, describes Microbes and Evolution as “A
breathtaking range of topics are woven together under a common theme that takes
the reader from the origin of microbial life to its diversity, from mutualism
and competition to efforts to recapitulate evolution, from the diversity of
bacterial viruses to ‘the smallest and most abundant microorganism in the
ocean.’”
“This
book is an excellent collection of articles and should be read by everyone
working with bacteria (and others as well) or thinking of doing so,” says
Charles Yanofsky, professor emeritus, Department of Biology, Stanford
University.
Roberto Kolter did
his academic training at Carnegie-Mellon University, UC San Diego, and
Stanford. Since 1983 he has been a
faculty member of Harvard Medical School.
A fanatic of food and wine, he enjoys burning those calories off in
early morning runs along the Charles River in Boston.
Stanley Maloy obtained his Ph.D. at the University
of California at Irvine. He went on to do postdoctoral research at the
University of Utah. He was on the faculty at the University of Illinois in
Urbana-Champaign for many years, and moved to San Diego State University
in 2002. His favorite activity is thinking about science, but he also
enjoys traveling and soaking his head in the ocean.
Microbes
and Evolution has a list price of $14.95 and can be purchased through ASM
Press online at http://bit.ly/asm053012.
# # #
ASM
Press is the book publishing arm of the American Society for Microbiology
(ASM), the oldest and largest single life science membership organization in
the world. The ASM's mission is to promote research in the microbiological
sciences and to assist communication between scientists, policy makers, and the
public to improve health and foster economic well-being.

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