A reader's companion
The many origins of multicellularity.
Multicellularity is not a single innovation on the road to animals. It has been invented, independently, at least twenty times — possibly a hundred, depending on how strictly you count — in lineages that share no recent common multicellular ancestor. The popular ladder is a story about us, told backwards.
→ See the bush · an interactive map of every independent origin
What this is
A written companion to a documentary on the polyphyletic origins of multicellularity. Same story, same chapter order, same thesis — but where the documentary leans on animation and pacing, the explainer leans on prose that unpacks the biological mechanism behind every claim.
Written for a reader who is curious, patient, and has no prior training in biology. Every term is defined where it's first used. Citations are linked into the bibliography and resolve to the primary literature the corpus is built on.
Chapters
The Bush
Three deep branches, dots scattered across all of them, the popular ladder taken down a rung at a time.
The Problem
What every lineage that crossed into multicellularity had to solve — adhesion, coordination, the temptation to cheat.
The Tools Were Already There
Adhesion molecules, signaling cascades, GRNs — almost everything multicellular life needs was present in single cells, waiting.
The Trap
Why only clonal lineages reached complex multicellularity, and what a ratchet is.
The Door Swings Both Ways
Reversion, cancer, yeast: when the multicellular contract breaks, and when cells walk back through the door.
The Bush, Revisited
Live disagreements, open questions, and the picture this companion leaves you with.