Abstract
IT is now at least eight years since there have been any flutterings in the cytological dovecot. Everyone had settled down to a cell containing a nucleus with chromosomes, karyoplasm, karyosome, and plasmosome, and a cytoplasm with centrosome, Golgi bodies, and mitochondria. If there were malcontents, they had been silenced by the shock effect of the vast and ever-increasing international literature on the cytoplasmic inclusions. In the field concerned with the intra-nuclear bodies, the chromosomes have attained respectability even in the views of those physiologists who cannot understand such a simple thing as the chromosome theory.
Symbionticism and the Origin of Species.
By Prof. Ivan E. Wallin Pp. xi + 171 + 4 plates. (London: Bailliére, Tindall and Cox, 1927.) 13s. 6d. net.
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GATENBY, J. Symbionticism and the Origin of Species. Nature 121, 164–165 (1928). https://doi.org/10.1038/121164a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/121164a0
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