resprouting seaside alder  A QUIET STAND OF ALDERS   resprouting seaside alder
"The alder, whose fat shadow nourisheth

                                    All set neere to him long flourisheth." -- William Browne, c. 1613
Welcome to the web page of Stanley Rice, author and botanist.
     Welcome to A Quiet Stand of Alders, the author website of Stanley Rice, a science educator and writer. If you care passionately about the natural world and its evolutionary history, this website is for you.
       Here you will find essays about ecology, evolution; and ethical, political, and religious issues connected with them. I intend my approach as constructive, although I do not hold back from criticism when the facts demand it. At the same time, I want to preserve a context of peaceful meditation, such as you will find in a quiet stand of alder trees down by the river. Peace and zeal are the fire and ice of a scientist, an educator, an evolutionist, or a naturalist. About every week, a new essay will be posted. You can find all of the old essays in the archives.
       I am embedded in the creationist and anti-environmentalist heartland of rural Oklahoma and will report to you from the front lines! I consider myself a missionary for evolution and ecology.
       Please feel free to contact me at the email below, or by posting comments on my evolution blog.



In Memory of Lynn Margulis
January 30, 2012

One of the greatest evolutionary scientists, Lynn Margulis, died last November 22. In this essay I would like to reflect on her contributions to our understanding of the world. Not just of a narrow aspect of science, but the whole world.

Lynn was a child prodigy who began her university studies at age 14. In graduate school, she studied genetics, and married her fellow graduate student, Carl Sagan (who was as creative and large a thinker as she). She was not content to just learn what others said about genetics. She wanted to understand why some traits were inherited only through the mother’s side. These traits appeared to be passed on not through the chromosomes in the nucleus but through the mitochondria, which are tiny energy factories inside of most cells. Some plant traits appeared to be passed on through chloroplasts, the tiny green photosynthesis factories in many plant cells. This meant that mitochondria and chloroplasts had, and used, their own DNA. She wondered why they had that DNA. When she read about the work of some Russian scientists in the early twentieth century, she had her answer. Mitochondria and chloroplasts started off as bacteria, which moved into and took up residence inside of larger cells that already had nuclei. They did not consume the larger cell, nor did it consume them. Instead they formed a permanent partnership, which has been going on for billions of years. Mitochondria and chloroplasts began, she said, by symbiosis—cells living together. The result was the genesis of a new, complex kind of cell. She called this process symbiogenesis.

When Lynn Sagan (later Margulis) wrote her paper, it was rejected fifteen times. She was persistent. Finally it was published. At first her ideas were scorned. But in less than a decade, most biologists were convinced that she was right. When I went to hear her speak, while I was a sophomore at the University of California, Santa Barbara (it was the first scientific seminar I ever attended), she was well received, even though the professor who introduced her made some off-color jokes. At the time, I was a creationist, and I thought that there were only two alternatives to the origin of a complex cell: either gradual evolution, or sudden creation. Lynn Margulis presented a third alternative. Her view was entirely evolutionary, of course; but the host cell and the bacteria had evolved, separately and gradually, then suddenly merged together.

Today Margulis’s view of the origin of mitochondria and chloroplasts is a textbook standard. Scientists are working on an even more amazing example of symbiogenesis: many believe that the nucleus itself is the evolutionary descendant of a bacterium that moved into a larger cell that did not yet have a nucleus. I suspect that this idea would have been too wild even for Lynn in the early days.

In her final years, Lynn was looking for evidence that cilia and “flagella” of complex cells (such as paramecia) were the evolutionary descendants of spirochete bacteria. She had some good circumstantial evidence, but never did find proof.

She was also the principal biological champion of the “Gaia” view of the Earth, a view first proposed by atmospheric scientists James Lovelock. All of the organisms of the Earth form a single network of life. The Earth is therefore not just the home of life, but is alive. Not every component of the Earth is alive, of course; but neither is every component of a cell. A cell has living components, such as mitochondria, and nonliving components, such as water. But nobody would say that a cell is not alive. By the same reasoning, the Earth is alive.

Lynn was pugnacious. She was not afraid of a good scientific debate. And she was not afraid to be wrong. Clearly she was wrong in her assertion that HIV is not an infectious virus. But if she had never taken the risk of being wrong, would she ever have had the insights that changed modern biology?

I had a chance to talk with Lynn Margulis in 2004, as I was preparing my Encyclopedia of Evolution. She was 66 years old at the time, and could have retired comfortably and with renown. But she was still fighting for recognition of yet more of her insights. I mispronounced her name, and she corrected me: the emphasis is on the first syllable, Margulis. She said I would only be allowed to make that mistake once. I didn’t make it again. She enjoyed what I had written in my encyclopedia but was not afraid to point out what she considered errors. When I dedicated Life of Earth to her last year, she left me a phone message saying that the dedication brought tears of happiness to her eyes. She bought copies and left them for students to read at the University of Massachusetts, where she worked. I am glad to have brought a little joy and appreciation into the life of this great scientist.

We can carry on Lynn’s legacy if we continue to think big about the world. When Lynn started, most scientists were trying to decompose the big picture down into component parts. But now, many scientists consider that the interactions of those components are the most important thing. An entire research institute, the Santa Fe Institute, is devoted to understanding complex interactions and emergent properties. Geneticists now know that humans and mice have about the same number of genes, and most of them are the same genes; the big difference between a mouse and a human is not the genes but the interactions among the genes. I like to think that Lynn contributed greatly to this important change in the scientific view of the world.



January-March 2008

April-June 2008
  July-September 2008
  October-December 2008
  January-March 2009
  (
includes The Sabbath of the Earth)
  April-June 2009
  (includes The End of Altruism
 
and If Humans Vanished...)
July-September 2009
  (includes You Are an Ecosystem)
October-December 2009
(includes Absurd Creativity
and Fiscal Responsibility -- In Plants)
January-March 2010
  (includes Deep Time and Deep Intestines
and The Evolution of Spite)
April-June 2010
  (includes My Neighbors' Earth
and Trying to Interfere with Natural Selection)
July-September 2010
(includes Global Warming—It's Happening Now
and Green Is the New Green)
October-December 2010
(includes Degrees of Freedom
and I Humbly Suggest that Scientists Should Rule the World)
January-March 2011
  Peace Be Unto You
  Do Republican Leaders Hate God's Creation?
  A Christian View of Creation
  Biodiversity, Part One
  Biodiversity, Part Two
  Biodiversity, Part Three
  Biodiversity, Part Four
  The Capacity for Evil
  So Where Is Global Warming Now?
  The Evolved Human Mind
  Judgment of the Future
  How Dark Was My Valley
April-July 2011
  Relief
  Oath Upon the Earth
  The Long Emergency
  The Dangerous Conservative Viewpoint
  Cottonwood Investments, Part 2
  Disruptive Energy
  Biodiversity and Noah's Ark: The Solution You've Been Waiting For
  Built to Last
  How to Reduce Our Impact on the Earth
July-September 2011
  Where Have All the Scarecrows Gone?
  Less Hope Now than Ever?
  You Can’t Do Just One Thing
  Our Great Big Opportunity
  What Rick Perry Thinks About Science
  The Murder of Altruism?
  How I Spent September 11
  A Celebration of Evolutionary Science
October-December 2011
  Republican States: Socialist Beneficiaries of Big Government Altruism?
  Dinosaur Prints
  The Quiet Stand of Alders: Wildfire and Recovery
  So What Has Changed Since 2008?
  A Revolutionary Vision
  Home Sweet Home
  Beauty and Survival
  Laboratory Earth
  Warm Winter Thoughts
January-March 2012
  The Evolution of a New Economy?

About the Author     stanley rice as darwin
                                  Follow me on Twitter
Blog
author with the world's largest peanut  Honest Ab
a blog about evolution and related topics


Books:
Encyclopedia of Biodiversity
 Encyclopedia of Biodiversity  Just Published!
New Brunswick, New York: Facts on File, 2011.

Life of Earth
 Life of Earth: Portrait of a Beautiful, Middle-Aged, Stressed-Out Planet
Amherst, New York: Prometheus Books, 2010.

Green Planet
 Green Planet  Paperback edition coming!
New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press, 2009.

Encyclopedia of Evolution
Encyclopedia of Evolution  Revised edition coming soon!
New York: Facts on File, 2007.

Upcoming Books:
Encyclopedia of Evolution (Revised Edition)

Articles
 
Presentations

All non-public-domain content not otherwise attributed copyright by Stanley A. Rice, 2008-2012.