The Ocean's Menagerie How earth's strangest creatures reshape the rules of life

C. Drew Harvell, 1954-

Book - 2025

"An elegant survey of ocean invertebrates and their bizarre "superpowers," blending cutting edge science of the strangest creatures on our planet with the promising discoveries they hold for those of us on land, by a leading marine biologist Hundred-year-old giant clams, coral kingdoms the size and shape of cities, and jellyfish that glow in the dark: ocean invertebrates are among the oldest and most diverse organisms on earth, bending our rules of land-based biology. Although often overlooked, the spineless creatures of the deep contain 600 million years of adaptation to problems of disease, energy consumption, nutrition, and defense. In THE ANCIENT MENAGERIE, world-renowned marine ecologist Dr. Drew Harvell takes us from Ha...waii to the Salish Sea, from St. Croix to Indonesia, to uncover the incredible underwater "superpowers" of spineless creatures: we meet corals many times stronger than steel or concrete, sponges who create potent chemical compounds to fight off disease, and sea stars that act as gardeners for coastlines, keeping all the other nearby species in perfect balance. As our planet changes fast, the biomedical, engineering, and energy innovations of these wonderous creatures hold ever more important secrets to our own survival. THE ANCIENT MENAGERIE is a tale of biological marvels, a story of a woman's passionate connection to a career in science, and a call to arms to protect the world's most ancient ecosystems"--

Saved in:
2 copies ordered
Subjects
Published
New York : Viking 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
C. Drew Harvell, 1954- (author)
Physical Description
pages cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9780593654286
  • The sponge's pharmacopeia
  • The coral's castle
  • The seafan's ancient defenses
  • The sea slug's sting
  • The giant clam's light trick
  • The octopus's shape shift
  • The jellyfish's light show
  • The keystone star's sticky skin.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Harvell (Ocean Outbreak), an ecology professor emeritus at Cornell University, serves up an entrancing examination of marine invertebrates' many peculiarities. She describes, for instance, how the coral skeleton has evolved to act "like a hall of mirrors" directing sunlight toward the tiny photosynthetic algae that live within coral and generate energy for its host. Sea slugs known as nudibranchs upended prevailing scientific wisdom that "cells and tissues were not shared between different species," she writes, discussing how they incorporate into their own defensive systems the "vicious stinging cells called nematocysts" that they absorb from the anemones they prey on. Exploring scientific efforts to harness aquatic creatures' adaptations for humanity's benefit, Harvell describes how pharmaceutical companies are working to incorporate the cancer-slowing chemicals produced by sea sponges into drug treatments, and how doctors hope coral-derived materials might one day be used as a substitute for human bone in reconstructive surgeries. Throughout, Harvell emphasizes invertebrates' outsize influence on their ecosystems, describing how giant clams filter pathogenic bacteria from water and how coral provide protection from waves and erosion for the crustaceans, fish, and other creatures that live on reefs. Buoyed by fascinating trivia and lay reader--friendly science, this should be a no-brainer for nature lovers. Agent: Katherine Flynn, Calligraph. (Apr.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Accounts of oceanic invertebrates are not a genre, but this "overview of" makes a good case for it. Of 35 animal groups, one is vertebrates, from sharks to humans. The remaining 34 have no backbones; most live in the ocean and turn out to be abundant, often grotesque, and possessed of "superpowers" useful not only in their struggle for existence but also through chemicals and structures that may improve human lives and fight disease. Fish and mammals remain in the background, but few readers will complain as marine biologist Harvell, author ofOcean Outbreak: Confronting the Rising Tide of Marine Disease, describes the creatures she loves whose complexity belies their ancient evolutionary history. Passing over billions of years of single-celled life, she begins more than 600 million years ago, when the first multicellular organism appeared, probably a sponge. A sponge has no eyes, limbs, head, or organs, and it can't move. It's basically a collection of cells that suck in water, extract bacteria-size food, and then expel it. Despite this simplicity, it carries on sophisticated life processes. Corals exist in symbiosis with algae, which provide them with food; together, they build the world's largest living colonies, which may stand over 40 feet high and extend hundred of miles. Intelligent octopuses, giant clams, rapacious sea slugs, deadly jellies (they aren't fish), and essential keystone stars (also not fish) reveal their secrets and display their superpowers, a description less hyperbolic than it appears at first. It has become traditional to conclude natural histories with bad news, and Harvell does not break the mold. Warming and acidifying oceans continue to kill coral reefs across the world. Also to blame, not surprisingly, are overfishing and pollution. A good read about bizarre creatures. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.