Of Mites and Men

Photo by Ben Conniff

Richard Conniff has mites. A lot of them. At least, that鈥檚 what the world鈥檚 expert on follicle mites discovered after using a microscope to view a swab taken from the author鈥檚 (and 探花精选 blogger鈥檚) forehead.

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know I had all these follicle mites on me,鈥 says Conniff, adding somewhat reassuringly that 鈥渋t鈥檚 entirely natural,鈥 because our bodies are typical environments for these tiny organisms.

Conniff has had more than his share of intimate, sometimes harrowing experiences with nature, many of which he elaborates on in his new book, I confess I haven鈥檛 yet read it, but I did listen to an interview Conniff did last week on 鈥,鈥 an Australian program, during which he his job as a natural history writer, mentioning some of the stories he included in his latest work. If you tune in, you鈥檒l hear a bit about the multitude of mites mentioned above, chimpanzee peacemakers, family reunions among lemurs, and the lessons barnacles can teach (if you watch them long enough).

Through the anecdotes and observations Conniff shares, you might even recognize some things about yourself, such as tendencies toward dominance, rivalry, and reconciliation. "These are things that are deeply rooted," says Conniff, 鈥淭hey're all influenced by our evolution from animals." Perhaps that鈥檚 why humans tend to anthropomorphize--we鈥檙e only trying to identify with our relatives.