Biology Now, 2e

(Ben Green) #1

272 ■ CHAPTER 15 Bacteria and Archaea


BIODIVERSITY


Figure 15.4


Citizen scientists work alongside professional scientists to increase our
knowledge about the natural world
There are many ways you can contribute to science—by collecting data, analyzing data, or even
being an experimental subject like the video game players who work with Sebastian Seung. And the
advantages are not one-way: citizen scientists learn new things, often have fun, and report feeling a
sense of purpose and contribution.

Q1: In which of the three ways did the navel microbiome participants contribute?

Q2: Which of the advantages listed above do you think the navel microbiome citizen scientists
received?

Q3: Would you be willing to contribute to the navel microbiome project? Why or why not?

Data collection Data analysis

Participation as an
experimental subject

Citizen scientists from the Republic of the Congo are
learning to map the forest with GPS.

A citizen scientist in North America uses an app to
document plant budding dates.

Sebastian Seung, a professor at Princeton University,
works with citizen scientists around the world to
map the brain through a video game.

Dutch tradesman Antonie van Leeuwenhoek
first opened our eyes to the microbial world
back in 1668, when he used simple, handcrafted
microscopes to discover bacteria swimming
around in pond water. In the intervening 350
years, our knowledge of the microbial world has
come a long way.

Today, we know that bacteria and archaeans
make up more than two-thirds of the species
found on Earth. In 2016, microbiologists at UC
Berkeley published a revised evolutionary tree
of life that, for the first time, included the vast
diversity of bacteria and archaeans lurking in
Earth’s nooks and crannies. With the data used
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