Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. Kozo-Polyansky's theories were first published to the West in 1979 by Khakhina's book on the history of the theory of symbiogenesis. However, the entirety of his original book was not translated into English until 2010 by Victor Fet, and Lynn Margulis.

  3. More than eighty years ago, before we knew much about the structure of cells, Russian botanist Boris Kozo-Polyansky brilliantly outlined the concept of symbiogenesis, the symbiotic origin of cells with nuclei.

  4. Jan 1, 2021 · Although the ideas of symbiogenesis appeared in the late 19th century, Boris Kozo-Polyansky was the first who presented the explanation of complexification via symbiogenesis conceptually in his book, The New Principle of Biology. An Outline on the Theory of Symbiogenesis (1924), which became his magnum opus. 2.

    • Vladimir A. Agafonov, Vladimir V. Negrobov, Abir U. Igamberdiev
    • 2021
  5. 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.

    • Karl J. Niklas
    • kjn2@cornell.edu
    • 2010
  6. Jan 1, 2021 · An Outline of the Theory of Symbiogenesis. This book is a classic and forgotten work of the botanist Boris Mikhailovich Kozo-Polyansky (18901957). It was published in Russian in 1924, by a publishing house Puchina (‘The Abyss’), which mostly specialized in science fiction.

    • Victor Fet
    • 2021
  7. Jan 1, 2021 · The great American naturalist Lynn Margulis—whose serial endosymbiosis theory was presciently predated by Kozo-Polyansky by four decadeswas instrumental in organizing this resurrection and ‘horizontal transfer’ of knowledge, forgotten by that time even in Russia.

  8. Jun 15, 2010 · More than eighty years ago, before we knew much about the structure of cells, Russian botanist Boris Kozo-Polyansky brilliantly outlined the concept of symbiogenesis, the symbiotic origin...

  1. People also search for