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Ed YongA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
The impact of microbes on evolution and the passing on of important microbes to our offspring have been recurring themes in I Contain Multitudes. The examples that have been cited in previous chapters have been more focused on relationships between animals and bacteria that have been working in tandem for a long period of time. As with every long-term relationship, what Yong calls “the long waltz” between the parties began with an initial contact.
The chapter opens with the story of man whose hand was pierced by a piece of a tree branch as he was cutting it down (143). His hand eventually became infected, and a cyst formed. After the cyst was removed, scientists sequenced the DNA and found unusual bacterial DNA among the sequences. The sequences matched a bacterium called Sodalis, which up until this point was known to live only in the bodies of insects (143). This story is one of coincidences: A branch happens to cut someone, and a bacterium happens to begin to grow within the person.
Most symbioses most likely started with similarly random event that just so happened to turn into a long-term relationship (145). Microbes can be passed along during sex or by eating food containing a new bacterium that then takes hold in the gut.
By Ed Yong