Life changing How humans are altering life on Earth

Helen Pilcher

Book - 2020

For the last three billion years or so, life on Earth was shaped by natural forces. Evolution tended to happen slowly, with species crafted across millennia. Then, a few hundred thousand years ago, along came a bolshie, big-brained, bipedal primate we now call Homo sapiens, and with that, the Earth's natural history came to an abrupt end. We are now living through the post-natural phase, where humans have become the leading force shaping evolution. This thought-provoking book considers the many ways that we've altered the DNA of living things and changed the fate of life on earth. We have carved chihuahuas from wolves and fancy chickens from jungle fowl. We've added spider genes to goats and coral genes to tropical fish. It&#...039;s possible to buy genetically-modified pets, eat genetically-modified fish and watch cloned ponies thunder up and down the polo field. Now, as our global dominance grows, our influence extends far beyond these species. As we warm our world and radically reshape the biosphere, we affect the evolution of all living things, near and far, from the emergence of novel hybrids such as the pizzly bear, to the entirely new strains of animals and plants that are evolving at breakneck speed to cope with their altered environment. In Life Changing, Helen introduces us to these post-natural creations and talks to the scientists who create, study and tend to them. At a time when the future of so many species is uncertain, we meet some of the conservationists seeking to steer evolution onto firmer footings with novel methods like the 'spermcopter', coral IVF and plans to release wild elephants into Denmark. Helen explores the changing relationship between humans and the natural world, and reveals how, with evidence-based thinking, humans can help life change for the better.

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Subjects
Published
London ; New York : Bloomsbury Sigma 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Helen Pilcher (author)
Other Authors
Amy Agoston (illustrator)
Physical Description
383 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color) ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781472956712
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1. The Wolf that Rolled Over
  • Chapter 2. Strategic Moos and Golden Gnus
  • Chapter 3. Super Salmon and Spider-Goats
  • Chapter 4. Game of Clones
  • Chapter 5. Screwworms and Suicide Possums
  • Chapter 6. The Age of the Chicken
  • Chapter 7. Sea-Monkeys and Pizzly Bears
  • Chapter 8. Darwin's Moth
  • Chapter 9. Resilient Reefs
  • Chapter 10. Love Island
  • Chapter 11. Pigs and Purple Emperors
  • Chapter 12. The New Ark
  • Additional Reading
  • Acknowledgements
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

From cloned sheep to sterilized screwworms, examples of the myriad ways humans have embraced technology in pursuit of improvements to daily life, and lives, are legion. Pilcher (Bring Back the King, 2017) recounts how humanity has entered a postnatural era in which our actions have become the overriding influence on the planet, and relationships with other species have entered realms previously the province of science fiction. Animals, plants, and insects are being selectively bred for increasingly specific characteristics, while, for example, the population of domesticated species, such as chickens, far outnumbers their wild counterparts. Alarm bells may ring over the many ways such molecular manipulation can go wrong, but Pilcher takes great pains to point out examples of how such scientific prowess can helpfully stem such looming crises as extinction. Combining her professional expertise in stem cell biology with an unlikely second career as a stand-up comic, Pilcher's amusing yet grounded excursion into the essential ways humans, animals, plants, and microorganisms must coexist is both a rich and riotous popular science trove well worth contemplating.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Science writer Pilcher (Bring Back the King) delivers an agreeable account of how humans have bred and altered animals throughout history. Cheerfully, she imagines how a Stone Age boy, intent on "mischief" while the adults were out hunting, might have grabbed a wolf puppy from its den as its mother lurked nearby, thus beginning the human program of animal domestication. She proceeds to address opposing theories on how domestication happened, and delves into the complexities of genetic modification. Pilcher maintains a mostly lighthearted tone, with chapter titles such as "Strategic Moos and Golden Gnus" and references to how "evolutionary mischief-making" has resulted in "bald cats, long-haired hamsters" and "goldfish with Elvis-like quiffs." She portrays the technology for writing genetic code as merely the most recent iteration of a long-established process, and optimistically explores its many applications (such as engineering female goats to produce milk containing strands of spider silk, a material stronger than steel). Taking a wider and more somber view, she reflects on how "in a relatively small slice of geological time--the last 12,000 years or so," humanity has made... irrevocable changes to the Earth itself." Popular science readers will find her entertaining work illuminates many of those changes. (Apr.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

An exploration of humans' role as "curators of the planet that we have come to dominate."Transforming plants and animals for our own benefit began in prehistoric times, according to this expert, often unsettling account of this transformation's progress, which accelerated after World War II and will soon reach warp speed with advances that continue to build on those from the past decade. Science writer Pilcher, whose previous book was about de-extinction, writes that it began with the dog, domesticated tens of thousands of years ago. This was accomplished by simple Darwinian natural selection: The most amiable wolves prospered by associating with humans, produced far more offspring than their unfriendly peers, and they now vastly outnumber them. Similarly, by selecting only desirable qualities, our ancestors converted other flora and fauna to more productive crops and domestic animals. After scientists learned the secrets of DNA in the mid-20th century, genetic modification worked its wonders so well that today, there is enough food to feed the worlda goal widely considered impossible 50 years ago. Readers who forget the downside to ordering the Earth for our convenience will squirm as Pilcher chronicles how the world's jungles are being cleared to grow food mostly intended to feed livestock, which make up 60% of the planet's large land animals. Humans come next at 36%. Wildlife brings up the rear, at 4% and dwindling. Chickens are by far the most common bird. We eat more than 65 billion (!) each year, and their massive bone remains will lead future paleontologists to believe that chickens were the 21st-century's dominant life form. Concluding on an upbeat but only mildly uplifting note, Pilcher recounts successful efforts to restore barren countryside to genuine wilderness and the rescue of the cute, flightless New Zealand kakapo from extinction.An impressive rendering of the disturbing history of human tinkering with nature. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.