Dr. W. Ford Doolittle (born 1942 in Urbana, Illinois) is a biochemist.
As of 2005, he is a professor at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia. He received his BA in Biochemical Sciences from Harvard University in 1963 and his PhD from Stanford University in 1967.
Since joining the biochemistry department at Dalhousie in 1971, Dr. Doolittle has made significant contributions to the study of cyanobacteria, found evidence for the endosymbiont hypothesis of chloroplasts' origins, developed a theoretical basis for the initial evolution of eukaryotes and shown the importance of horizontal gene transfer in prokaryotic evolution.
In 1981, Dr. Doolittle received some level of notoriety for his article in The CoEvolution Quarterly entitled "Is Nature Really Motherly?". A sharp rebuttal of J. E. Lovelock's formulation of the Gaia Theory, Doolittle's article is often cited by Lovelock's critics.
External links
- Personal homepage at Dalhousie University
- Archaea and the Prokaryote-to-Eukaryote Transition, with James R. Brown, MMBR Dec. 1997, pp. 456-502
- Phylogenetic Classification and the Universal Tree, Science 25 June 1999, pp. 2124-2129, doi:10.1126/science.284.5423.2124, PubMed:10381871
- A Kingdom-Level Phylogeny of Eukaryotes Based on Combined Protein Data, with S. L. Baldauf, A. J. Roger, I. Wenk-Siefert, Science 3 Nov. 2000, pp. 972-977, doi:10.1126/science.290.5493.972, PubMed:11062127
- W.F.Doolittle on Google Scholar
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