the community site for and by
developmental and stem cell biologists

Of velvet worms and water bears: a review of ‘The Animal Kingdom: A Very Short Introduction’ by Peter Holland

Posted by , on 1 March 2012

The Metazoa, our corner of the great assemblage of life, is a curious and fascinating topic, but one that is relatively obscure in these days when a great many of the scientists studying animals are concerned with them as biomedical model systems. ‘The Animal Kingdom: A Very Short Introduction’ goes a long way to illuminating this relative obscurity, and is likely to become an excellent first point of call for undergraduate and graduate students of evolutionary-developmental biology (‘evo-devo’). It will also make for a fascinating read for biomedical scientists who are fed up of their evolutionarily-minded colleagues lecturing them about how fascinating velvet worms (Phylum: Onycophora) are.

Animals come in a huge variety of sizes and forms and their interrelationships have been the subject of often very heated debate since the 19th century. The coming of the age of molecular biology has revolutionised these debates by enabling zoologists to infer evolutionary relationships by comparing DNA and protein sequences; they no longer have to rely on the vagaries of morphological comparisons. This has lead to a number of significant revisions. Previously well-established groups such as ‘Articulata’, which united segmented invertebrates such as insects and earthworms, have been shown to be artefacts of convergent evolution or widespread character loss. As with all revolutions, there have been dissenting voices (tales of warring academics who wouldn’t set foot in the same lecture theatre as one another are not unknown). However, as the sophistication of molecular phylogenetic techniques has advanced, and datasets have grown exponentially owing to the power of next-generation sequencing (people talk only of phylogenomics these days), a consensus of the animal phylogeny has been arrived at. Of course, the arrangement of many groups is still unresolved and problems remain, but the broad brush strokes of animal evolution are agreed upon: the family tree of the 30-odd animal phyla (Prof. Holland recognises 33 in his book) is largely established. As a guide not only to the diversity of animals, but also to their evolution ‘The Animal Kingdom: A Very Short Introduction’ thus comes at a very timely juncture.

Prof. Holland’s book takes readers on a tour of the Metazoa using an evolutionary framework. After discussing the issue of what an animal is, and then addressing the much thornier one of how to organise our thinking about them phylogenetically, the book discusses each of the prominent groups. Firstly dealing with the basal animals that do not possess bilateral symmetry (sponges, jellyfish and the like), and then taking each major group of Bilateria in turn, the book provides a lucidly written guide to the diversity of animal form and how it is generated during development. As such, it is an excellent introductory evo-devo text.

For old hands, the description of the molecular revolution of the 1980s and the discovery of the ‘developmental toolkit’ is particularly entertaining. Capturing the excitement at the discovery of the homeobox sequence is a difficult thing to do in 2012, when it is possible to sequence a human genome in 15 minutes. But it’s worth the money on its own. I heartily recommend it.

Thumbs up (8 votes)
Loading...

Categories: Book Reviews

2 thoughts on “Of velvet worms and water bears: a review of ‘The Animal Kingdom: A Very Short Introduction’ by Peter Holland”

  1. Excellent review. Very sorry, i intended to click on the thumbs up but my mouse bumped and i hit the thumbs down! This is a well written review so if there’s a way to change my rating please let me know!

    1
    0
    1. Hello,

      Oops! The buttons are very close together, aren’t they…. Have managed to remove your accidental thumbs-down, but I can’t change it to a thumbs-up. You should be able to click again, now, though.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Get involved

Create an account or log in to post your story on the Node.

Sign up for emails

Subscribe to our mailing lists.

Do you have any news to share?

Our ‘Developing news’ posts celebrate the various achievements of the people in the developmental and stem cell biology community. Let us know if you would like to share some news.