by the Understanding Science teamDid you know there are more bacteria living in your intestines than there are cells in your entire body? That might be a disturbing thought, but without gut microbes you would have trouble digesting many grains, fruits, and vegetables — and you'd have more allergies and a weaker immune system, not to mention the infections you might get from harmful bacteria if real estate in your intestines weren't already occupied by friendly species.
How did scientists come to accept this surprising idea? In the 1960s, a young microbiologist named Lynn Margulis revived an old hypothesis. Based on a fresh look at evidence from the fields of cell biology, biochemistry, and paleontology, she proposed that several fundamental transitions in evolution occurred, not through competition and speciation, but through cooperation, when distinct cell lineages joined together to become a single organism. To her colleagues, the idea seemed crazy — like suggesting that aliens built the pyramids — but Margulis defended her work despite this initial resistance. She inspired scientists in far flung fields of biology to test her hypothesis in the lab. As the evidence piled up in the decades following her first paper, even some of her strongest critics had to concede that she'd been right. You may have already learned about some of her ideas as "facts" in your biology textbook, but you probably haven't heard about how controversial they were when they were first proposed. Let's take a closer look at this story of an extraordinary claim — and the extraordinary evidence that supports it. This case study highlights these aspects of the nature of science:
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For further details log on website :
http://undsci.berkeley.edu/article/endosymbiosis_01
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