This is the story of a profound revolution in the way biologists explore life's history, understand its evolutionary processes, and reveal its diversity. It is about life's smallest entities, deepest diversity, and greatest cellular biomass: the microbiosphere. Jan Sapp introduces us to a new field of evolutionary biology and a new brand of molecular evolutionists who descend to the foundations of evolution on Earth to explore the origins of the genetic system and the primary life forms from which all others have emerged. In so doing, he examines – from Lamarck to the present – the means of pursuing the evolution of complexity, and of depicting the greatest differences among organisms.
The New Foundations of Evolution takes us into a world that classical evolutionists could never have imagined: a deep phylogeny based on three domains of life and multiple kingdoms, and created by mechanisms very unlike those considered by Darwin and his followers. Evolution by leaps seems to occur regularly in the microbial world where molecular evolutionists have shown the inheritance of acquired genes and genomes are major modes of evolutionary innovation. Revisiting the history of microbiology for the first time from the perspective of evolutionary biology,
Sapp shows why classical Darwinian conceptions centering on questions of the origin of species were forged without a microbial foundation, why classical microbiologists considered it impossible to know the course of evolution, and classical molecular biologists considered the evolution of the molecular genetic system to be beyond understanding. In telling this stirring story of scientific iconoclasm, The New Foundations of Evolution elucidates how the new evolutionary biology arose, what methods and assumptions underpin it, and the fiery controversies that continue to shape biologists' understanding of the foundations of evolution today.
Foreword
Preface
1. Animal, Vegetable or Mineral?
2. Microbes First
3. The Germ of Phylogeny
4. Creatures Void of Form
5. About Chaos
6. Kingdoms at Biology's Borders
7. The Prokaryote and the Eukaryote
8. On the Unity of Life
9. Symbiotic Complexity
10. The Morning of Molecular Phylogenetics
11. Roots in the Genetic Code
12. A Third Form of Life
13. A Kingdom on a Molecule
14. Against Adaptationism
15. In the Capital of the New Kingdom
16. Out of Eden
17. Sketching the Tree of Life
18. The Dawn Cell Controversy
19. Three Domains
20. Disputed Territories
21. Grappling the World Wide Web
22. Entangled Roots and Braided Lives
Concluding Remarks
"It is a must-read for anyone with the slightest interest in the historical background to the current controversies regarding the role of horizontal gene transfer and how this affects the notion of a tree of life for prokaryotes."
– Systematic Biology