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Parasite Rex: Inside the Bizarre World of Nature's Most Dangerous Creatures
 
 

Parasite Rex: Inside the Bizarre World of Nature's Most Dangerous Creatures (Paperback)

de Carl Zimmer (Author) "In the beginning there was fever ..." En savoir plus
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Many books provoke a visceral reaction, but few really make you itch. Science writer Carl Zimmer's Parasite Rex does just that, provoking a deliciously creepy sense of paranoia in the reader as it explores a long-misunderstood realm of science. While entomologists love to announce that there are more species of insects than all other animals combined, few parasitologists choose to trump that by reminding us that "parasites may outnumber free-living species four to one." That figure is based on the multicellular chauvinism of the 19th century, which excludes bacteria and fungi from consideration (athlete's foot, anyone?), but Zimmer looks at the E. coli in our guts as well as the worms, flukes, mites, and other critters that earn a healthy living at our expense--and the expense of our domesticated plants and animals.

The author traveled to Africa to see firsthand the effects of sleeping sickness and river blindness. He learned from physicians and researchers that the parasites that wreak so much havoc are much more than the simple degenerates we've taken them for. Their complex adaptations to their environments--us--are as lovely and awe-inspiring as any eye or wing. The examples of hormonal and other behavioral control of hosts, causing changes in feeding habits and other life essentials, are chilling when personalized. Zimmer knows his subject well, and his writing, while robust and affecting, never descends to the all-too-easy gross-out. You wouldn't expect to find respect for a tapeworm, but Parasite Rex will show you how beautiful Earth's truly dominant life forms are. --Rob Lightner --Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.



From Publishers Weekly

One of the year's most fascinating works of popular science is also its most disgusting. From tapeworms to isopods to ichneumon wasps, "parasites are complex, highly adapted creatures that are at the heart of the story of life." Zimmer (At the Water's Edge) devotes his second book to the enormous variety of one- and many-celled organisms that live on and inside other animals and plants. The gruesome trypanosomes that cause sleeping sickness had nearly been routed from Sudan when the country's civil war began: now they're back. Costa Rican researcher Daniel Brooks has discovered dozens of parasites, including flies that lay eggs in deer noses: "snot bots." And those are only the creatures from the prologue. Zimmer discusses how the study of parasites began, with 19th-century discoveries about their odd life cycles. (Many take on several forms in several generations, so that a mother worm may resemble her granddaughter, but not her daughter.) He looks at how parasites pass from host to host, and how they defeat immune systems and vice versa. Many parasites alter their hosts' behavior: Toxoplasma makes infected rats fearless, thus more likely to be eaten by cats, who will then pick up the microbe. Quantifiable "laws of virulence" lead parasites to become nasty enough to spread, yet not so nasty as to wipe out all their hosts. And eons of coevolution can affect both partners: howler monkeys may avoid violent fights because screwworms can render the least scratch fatal. Two final chapters address parasites in human medicine and agriculture. Not only are parasites not all bad, Zimmer concludes in this exemplary work of popular science, but we may be parasites, tooDand we have a lot to learn from them about how to manage earth, the host we share. Illus. (Sept.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.

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2 internautes sur 2 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile :
5.0étoiles sur 5 The Alien was a penny-ante patzer compared to these critters, Sep 21 2002
Par E. A. Lovitt "starmoth" (Gladwin, MI USA) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
"Whence, thinkest thou, kings and parasites arose?" (Percy Bysshe Shelley, "Queen Mab").

"Parasite Rex" is an interesting look at the evolution and biology of parasites--but only for the strong of stomach.

In a sense it was comforting to read that we are not the most savage, efficient predators on Earth. Witness the parasite Sacculina that turns crabs into zombies--the slug-like female enters the crab through a convenient leg joint and gradually fills its whole body cavity, even wrapping roots around its host's eyestalks. The crab continues its shadow-crab life, sidling through the surf, eating mussels and clams. However, it stops moulting and growing as these activities would funnel energy away from Sacculina. If the parasite becomes pregnant, it doesn't matter whether the crab started out as male or female--it will brood and hatch the next generation of Sacculina as if the tiny larvae were its own children.

Sacculina's life-style is rather hard on the crab, but it is only one of the amazingly efficient (and bizarre) parasites described in this book. Other parasites have adopted Sacculina's method of eliminating their host's unnecessary functions such as reproduction (unnecessary to the parasite, that is) while leaving the host enough brain, nervous system, and digestive tract to go on feeding.

I imagine if there were a Sacculina-type parasite for humans, we would soon lose our urge to play football or go swimming. We would lie in front of the TV all day long, stuffing ourselves with---wait a minute, here! Is it possible...?

Zimmer also describes the stratagems that potential hosts have evolved to eliminate, or at least confuse the parasites that view them as mobile homes with well-stocked refrigerators:

"Consider the leaf-rolling caterpillars. They're pretty ordinary insect larvae with one exception: they fire their droppings like howitzers...What on Earth could have driven the evolution of an anal cannon? Parasites could. When parasitic wasps home in on a larva such as the leaf-roller caterpillar, one of the best clues is the odor of their host's droppings...The intense pressure put on leaf-roller caterpillars by [parasitic] wasps has pushed the evolution of high-pressure fecal firing. By getting their droppings away from them, the caterpillars have a better chance of not being found by wasps."

Even plants have evolved defenses against parasites, usually by creating poisonous chemicals that the parasite ingests as it chomps on the plant. Some plants will even emit a scent that attracts predator wasps to the caterpillar that is munching on their leaves (so much for high-pressure fecal cannons).

Be sure to read Chapters seven and eight: "The Two-Legged Host; and "How to Live in a Parasitic World," and ponder the statement, "A parasite that has no self-regulation is going to put itself out of existence and may take its host with it."

Could we humans be considered parasitic to Earth, itself?

"Parasite Rex" has detailed footnotes, a "Further Reading and Selected Bibliography" section, and an index for those readers who would like to pursue this fascinating subject. Carl Zimmer has also written, "At Water's Edge" and is a frequent contributor to "Discover," "National Geographic," "Natural History," "Nature," and "Science."

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1 internautes sur 1 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile :
5.0étoiles sur 5 A fascinating look at a subject that made me itch, Janv. 2 2002
Par Un client
I picked up a copy of Rex while on vacation, and simply couldn't put it down. Zimmer's treatment of the topic is at just the right level for the biologically illiterate but generally scientifically aware reader. I will have to say, however, that while reading this book, every time my body twitched or itched all kinds of wild thoughts would leap to my mind. Zimmer's history, and current state of science seem to be very solid. He does have a slightly unsettling tendency at the end of the book to put forward hypothetical ideas -- ok for a journalistic writer -- but a bit at odds with the scholarly approach to the beginning. In any case, I highly, highly recommend this book to anyone -- and it's not just the parasites in my brain thinking so!
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5.0étoiles sur 5 Fantastic book!, Fév 12 2009
Par A. Volk - Voir tous mes commentaires
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
Parasites have one huge evolutionary advantage- for them, surviving in a host is a life-or-death affair. For the host, it's often just an inconvenience. That means that the pressure is greater for parasites, giving them an edge in the evolutionary battle. Combined with their (typically) shorter lifespans, and you have to wonder how life ever got past these pesky parasites. The short answer is it didn't- parasites are everywhere. The longer answers is- the battle is still being fought, with some great leaps by the defenders (e.g., immune system) and some compromises by the attackers (e.g., decreased virulence). All in all, this is a fascinating book, well worth reading.
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Commentaires client les plus récents

5.0étoiles sur 5 Zimmer's book is fascinating
Flukes that can cleverly induce their snail and piscine hosts right into a hungry bird's beak; wasps that lay their eggs inside caterpillars and spiders, forcing these unfortunate... Read more
Publié le Mars 13 2004 par Dean Lombardo

5.0étoiles sur 5 Informative, Clear, insightful- biological paradigm shift...
... but written for the average joe or josephine!!!

This isn't just a book about parasites- it's an introduction to a new way of perceiving the world around us, re-evaluating... Read more

Publié le Janv. 24 2004 par Campbell Roark

5.0étoiles sur 5 Extraordinary
When I saw this book on the shelves I thought I was prepared for it. I thought it would present the world of parasites with interesting descriptions, some scientific information... Read more
Publié le Oct. 13 2003 par Fausto Labruto

5.0étoiles sur 5 an adventure and journey into a world we can hardly imagine
I was drawn to this book orignially out of the idea that things so small can cause so much damage and or alter larger animals in ways some would find hard to believe. Read more
Publié le Jui 11 2003 par Haseeb

4.0étoiles sur 5 Interesting!

Zimmer provides a fascinating and detailed explanation of the unseen role that parasites have played in evolutionary development over millions of years. Read more
Publié le Mars 3 2003 par Robert Anderson

4.0étoiles sur 5 A fascinating read.
I'm very tempted to give this book 5 stars, well at least 4 1/2 anyway. The subject is, of course, fascinating and almost unbelievable. Read more
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5.0étoiles sur 5 Scary*Terrifying*
Germ warfare has been going on for billions of years...
If you enjoyed (well, you know what I mean by that) reading "The Hot Zone", you will appreciate this fine piece of... Read more
Publié le Nov. 24 2002

5.0étoiles sur 5 Not for the faint of heart or nervous of temperament...
Carl Zimmer, author of Parasite Rex, writes with all the authority of a practicing parasitologist, despite the fact that he is actually a science journalist. Read more
Publié le Mai 21 2002 par xaosdog

4.0étoiles sur 5 fascinating tales from the real world
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Want to review what you once learned about parasites in invertebrate zoology? Want to learn about things you never heard at all in zoology lectures? Read more
Publié le Mai 18 2002 par Urs Peter Roos

5.0étoiles sur 5 Informative and entertaining
This is a very readable, entertaining, informative and even dramatic book on a subject that so far doesn't seem to have occupied the talents of so gifted a writer as Zimmer. Read more
Publié le Mars 10 2002 par magellan

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