Darwin's Dreampond: Drama in Lake Victoria

Darwin's Dreampond: Drama in Lake Victoria

by TijsGoldschmidt (Author)

Synopsis

Dazzling in their variety of sizes, shapes and colours, the cichlids (small perch-like fishes) of Lake Victoria, like the finches of the Galapagos Islands and Hawaii's Honeycreepers, have been geographically isolated long enough to undergo unusually broad speciation. These small fish form a species flock - closely related species that have descended from a common ancestor and radiated, or fanned, into different specializations - that is one of the most spectacular in the world, interesting anatomists, ecologists, ethologists and evolutionary biologists alike. The process of speciation was still under way until just recently, when the introduction of the large, predatory Nile perch so disrupted the Lake's intricate ecosystem that the glorious spectrum of cichlids has almost vanished. Darwin's Dreampond tells the evolutionary story of the extraordinary furu and the battlefield leading to extinction. Tijs Goldschmidt skilfully blends a discussion of the principles of neo-Darwinian evolution and speciation with a history of Lake Victoria's ecosystem. The science unfolds in the context of the first-person narrative on Golschmidt's adventures and misadventures as a field researcher. He portrays the colours and textures of the landscapes and the lives of the local people as he interacts with them during the course of his fieldwork.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 280
Publisher: MIT Press
Published: 31 Oct 1996

ISBN 10: 0262071789
ISBN 13: 9780262071789

Media Reviews
-- Barry Lopez, author of Arctic Dreams
Tijs Goldschmidt has trapped a ghost image in this solid and highly perceptive work - the glorious, haunting, and indecipherable complexity of biological life. Goldschmidt also shows us, however, that the human desire both to understand and to exploit such life is equally thought-provoking. Thus does Darwin's Dreampond become a first rate account of a modern scientist's field work among the cychlids and the Sukuma people of Lake Victoria. -- Barry Lopez, author of Arctic Dreams
& quot; Tijs Goldschmidt has trapped a ghost image in this solid and highly perceptive work - the glorious, haunting, and indecipherable complexity of biological life. Goldschmidt also shows us, however, that the human desire both to understand and to exploit such life is equally thought-provoking. Thus does Darwin's Dreampond become a first rate account of a modern scientist's field work among the cychlids and the Sukuma people of Lake Victoria.& quot; -- Barry Lopez, author of Arctic Dreams
Tijs Goldschmidt has trapped a ghost image in this solid and highly perceptive work - the glorious, haunting, and indecipherable complexity of biological life. Goldschmidt also shows us, however, that the human desire both to understand and to exploit such life is equally thought-provoking. Thus does Darwin's Dreampond become a first rate account of a modern scientist's field work among the cychlids and the Sukuma people of Lake Victoria. --Barry Lopez, author of Arctic Dreams