111 Quotes by David Quammen

  • Author David Quammen
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    I think the virus is present all the time, within reservoir species,” he told me. “And sometimes there is transmission from reservoir species to other species.

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  • Author David Quammen
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    Viruses face four basic challenges: how to get from one host to another, how to penetrate a cell within that host, how to commandeer the cell’s equipment and resources for producing multiple copies of itself, and how to get back out – out of the cell, out of the host, on to the next. A.

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  • Author David Quammen
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    Human-caused ecological pressures and disruptions are bringing animal pathogens ever more into contact with human populations, while human technology and behavior are spreading those pathogens ever more widely and quickly. There are three elements to the situation.

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  • Author David Quammen
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    Any tiny little thing that people do,” Dwyer said, if it makes them different from one another, from the idealized standard of herd behavior, “is going to reduce infection rates.

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  • Author David Quammen
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    The result will be gradual transmutation of heritable forms, and adaptation to circumstances, by a process of selective culling. Eventually he gave the crank a name: natural selection. Twenty years passed after the E notebook entry. The world heard nothing about natural selection.

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  • Author David Quammen
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    The purpose of this book is not to make you more worried. The purpose of this book is to make you more smart.

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  • Author David Quammen
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    We should appreciate that these recent outbreaks of new zoonotic diseases, as well as the recurrence and spread of old ones, are part of a larger pattern, and that humanity is responsible for generating that pattern. We should recognize that they reflect things that we’re doing, not just things that are happening to us. We should understand that, although some of the human-caused factors may seem virtually inexorable, others are within our control.

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  • Author David Quammen
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    If you look at the world from the point of view of a hungry virus,” the historian William H. McNeill has noted, “or even a bacterium – we offer a magnificent feeding ground with all our billions of human bodies, where, in the very recent past, there were only half as many people. In some 25 or 27 years, we have doubled in number. A marvelous target for any organism that can adapt itself to invading us.

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  • Author David Quammen
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    From this perspective, the most serious outbreak on the planet earth is that of the species Homo sapiens.

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