Flaws of nature

P., Dobson, Andrew

£16.99

In stock

A smart and accessible look at the myriad ways in which evolution doesn’t get things nearly as right as we imagine

ISBN: 9781803990170 Category:

Description

Species evolve over time to become perfectly adapted to their environments, right?Well, sometimes.
Consider that an elephant will not grow a seventh set of teeth, even though wearing down the sixth will condemn it to starvation; that hosts of the European cuckoo seem unable to tell that the overgrown monster in their nest is not their own chick; and that whales are fully aquatic mammals who, millions of years after first abandoning the land, still cannot breathe underwater.

This book is about evolution, but not its greatest hits. Instead, it explores everything in the animal kingdom that is self-defeating, ill-made, uneconomical, or downright weird – and explains how natural selection has favoured it. In the grand struggle for survival, some surprising patterns emerge: animals are always slightly out-of-date; inefficiency tends to increase over time; predators usually lose, and parasites usually win. With equal parts humour and scientific insight, Andy Dobson is here to explain the how and why of evolution’s limits and liabilities.

Additional information

Weight 0.476 kg
Dimensions 21.6 × 14.6 × 2.6 cm
Author

Publisher

Imprint

Cover

Hardback

Pages

272

Language

English

Edition
Dewey

591.38 (edition:23)

Readership

General – Trade / Code: K

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