Review of: Sperm Biology: An Evolutionary Perspective. Edited by Tim R. Birkhead, David J. Hosken, Scott Pitnick, 2009. Elsevier, Academic Press, Burlington, Massachusetts, 642 pp. ISBN: 9780123725684. $79.95. From any perspective, sperm are remarkable. We now know of course that sperm do not contain a tiny version of the adult (the appealing homunculus imagined by Nicholas Hartsoeker in the 17th century, Pinto-Correia 1997). Instead, sperm comprise a head of highly condensed DNA, an acrosome cap, virtually no cytoplasm, and a long tail partially encased within a sheath of specialized mitochondria. Then there is their extraordinary journey, with some sperm cast out into the external environment and some placed directly within the potentially hostile territory of the female. Finally, a series of complex processes ensues, leading to fusion of sperm and egg nuclei and the ultimate formation of a zygote. What is mind-boggling is how often the situation is absolutely nothing like the above. Sperm are the most variable cell type known (Jamieson 1987). They may have no tail or many tails; possess hooks, coils, spikes, balloons, and other widgets; vary in the presence of a nucleus, acrosome, and source of fuel for propulsion. To cap it all even if they are one of the minuscule percentage of sperm to reach their target, their DNA may still be ignominiously shoved aside. In addition to the notable biology, there is obvious interest in sperm in the context of assisted reproductive technologies in humans and animals of agricultural and conservation relevance. This offers an opportunity for a wide-spectrum synthesis, and Sperm Biology: An Evolutionary Perspective, edited by Tim Birkhead, David Hosken, and Scott Pitnick fulfils this purpose admirably. Its aim is to provide a broad evolutionary perspective in a series of 15 self-contained chapters written by experts across the whole of animal sperm biology. The book introduces us to its cast in a photo-autobiographical gallery (surely itself worthy of further study), and is full of magnificent biology with some excellent summaries of disparate research areas. It is also thought provoking in terms of the social context of what can/should be done in assisted reproduction. It seems somewhat unimaginative to say that even the bibliography of this book will be useful. But it really will. Much scholarly research has been done to dig out diverse literatures and some chapters have useful further reading suggestions. Most of the book is focused on research conducted during the last few decades, but that is still an enormous amount of biology to assimilate. The book is encyclopedic rather than conceptually integrated, and here I aim to highlight the novel themes and pervasive ideas.
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