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Bacteria help us digest food, break down toxins, and even influence our behavior and moods by interacting with our nervous system. A Grander View of Life

The central thesis of Yong's work is that "individuals" do not exist in isolation. Every animal, from the Hawaiian bobtail squid to humans, is an "ecosystem on legs". We are teeming with trillions of microbes that outnumber or at least rival our own human cells, functioning as an interconnected, interdependent whole. This perspective shifts our identity from a single organism to a thriving, complex colony of life. Microbes as Biological Architects

Microbes are not passive passengers; they are active builders and defenders:

They "sculpt" our organs and guide physical development from birth.

Microbes can bombard their hosts with genes, effectively modifying the genetic makeup and evolution of the species they inhabit. The Human Impact

Bacteria provide squids with "invisibility cloaks" via bioluminescence and allow beetles to consume entire forests.