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Boris Mikhailovich Kozo-Polyansky (Russian: Борис Михайлович Козо-Полянский; 20 January 1890 – 21 April 1957) was a Soviet and Russian botanist and evolutionary biologist, best known for his seminal work, Symbiogenesis: A New Principle of Evolution, which was the first work to place the theory of symbiogenesis into ...
Jan 1, 2021 · The great American naturalist Lynn Margulis—whose serial endosymbiosis theory was presciently predated by Kozo-Polyansky by four decades—was instrumental in organizing this resurrection and ‘horizontal transfer’ of knowledge, forgotten by that time even in Russia. Symbiogenesis. Eukaryotes.
- Victor Fet
- 2021
Jan 8, 2011 · New observations presented with modern examples of live phenomena make us virtually certain that B.M. Kozo-Polyansky’s “new principle” (1924) of the importance of symbiogenesis in the evolutionary process of at least 2000 million years of life on Earth is correct.
- Lynn Margulis
- celeste@geo.umass.edu
- 2010
Jan 1, 2021 · The principle of internal selection of cells as a condition for support of the multicellular organization was clearly formulated by Boris Kozo-Polyansky. The multicellular organism, according to Kozo-Polyansky, is formed evolutionary first via integration which is then followed by differentiation.
- Vladimir A. Agafonov, Vladimir V. Negrobov, Abir U. Igamberdiev
- 2021
Boris Mikhaylovich Kozo-Polyansky (1890–1957) graduated from Moscow University and in 1918 joined a Soviet university in his native Voronezh where he became a vice-president as well as director of the local botanical garden.
Nov 6, 2010 · The possibility that symbiogenesis is a major evolutionary mechanism was synthesized and articulated for the first time by the young Russian biologist Boris M. Kozo-Polyansky who published Symbiogenesis: a New Principle of Evolution in 1924.
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Jan 1, 2021 · The great American naturalist Lynn Margulis—whose serial endosymbiosis theory was presciently predated by Kozo-Polyansky by four decades—was instrumental in organizing this resurrection and ‘horizontal transfer’ of knowledge, forgotten by that time even in Russia.