Claim your special offer for MagellanTV here: try.magellantv.com/journeytothemicrocosmos. Start your free trial today so you can watch “Life On Us: A Microscopic Safari” about exploring the creatures that live, compete, feed, on breed on the surface or in the depths of our body, and the rest of MagellanTV’s science collection: www.magellantv.com/video/life-on-us-a-microscopic-safari.
And the frustrating thing is that people who took 4th grade bio thinks they know enough about biology to simplify gender and sexuality into XX and XY. Not quite related to the video at hand, but just as equally aggravating.
@@hausofjulian Yea, I know that feeling. And when you bring up the existence of intersex people they are often like " THATS JUST A RARE MUTATION AND DOES NOT COUNT !!! "
One thing I was thinking of... In a previous video, you mentioned that the water samples that are taken to look under the microscope are taken from around where James lives. But one thing I was wondering, is exactly how the microcosmos changes in different environments. It would be so cool to see the similarities and differences between the organisms in a sample of water from a desert oasis, and a frozen lake; or from a salt water sample, a brackish water sample, and a fresh water sample. Or even a sample from deep in a lake, and one from the lake's edge. I think such comparison videos would be pretty cool.
Actually on several videos they mentioned we were seeing organisms from samples taken from all kinds of places that were then sent to James. There was the beach sand and the samples from the coral farm for example, so it's not just samples from one area that we're seeing on the channel
Hello! I love the videos, just a suggestion. When showing an organism that moves too fast normally to see, maybe show both the slow captures and the normal speed recordings, just to give us some idea? Keep up the great work please!!
They're using slow captures in the video. The top left corner shows you the speed magnification. With these organisms, showing normal speed would be useless.
@@TheHighSpaceWizard Yes I am aware why and how to indicate when they slow down footage, I'm just thinking that seeing these organisms move naturally, even if very hard to see, would allow a little bit of insight to how this world is so different than ours.
Like because you have added not only Spanish but Portuguese as well. Thanks a lot! I mean, I hear your videos in English but it's great you have added more audio languages. Also, videos are always amazing!
At 07:04, looking at the spirotrichia, the largest organelle and the two almost directly below it in the image seemed to be completely stationary, while the rest of the organism, its cilia and other inner bits are in motion. Why?
Water diffuses into the cells due to osmosis, and the cell has to pump it out so it doesn’t burst and die. The vacuoles fill up with water and are expelled, something like a bladder. I think explained this in one of their other videos but I don’t remember which
This might sound odd but with weed being legal in my state I know plenty of ppl that don't clean their bongs and stuff what's the water from a used smoke pipe like? Watching your awesome videos just gets me thinking about the microcosmos around me every day Keep up the great stuff
Thank you so much for your wealth of content! I know I can rely on your accurate descriptions to help identify what species I am looking at! I literally just typed ciliates that walk into Google and was brought here to confirm it's an Aspidisca! (Aren't they cute😍) Thank you for alleviating several hours of searching still pictures and not being sure.
I really like that you use morphology and microscopy to classify these ciliates but at a certain point you need to run PCR and sequencing to really know what your looking at. The price of these things used to be quite large but thermocyclers have come right down in price and presumably you already have a laminar flow and the BLAST database is freely available. Consider saving up for it
team Magellan for life. I imagine Magellan and History Hit having a war for control over the new youtube universe and ally myself fervently with team Magellan for no better reason than I like their advertisements more. I subscribe to neither.
do an episode on caulerpa maybe? easy to grow in your sw setups and crazy that its all one cell as i understand it. sea grapes will just like grow if not dead and you drop them in a sw tank and pin them so they wont blow around. be careful not to contaminate local water though!
Where do you go to get the microbe samples for your microscope 🔬 slides? I'd love to hear. Do you go to a pond? A Lil creek area while walking your dog? Just curious because I explore the woods with my dogs and it would be interesting to hear where things come from.
one question, aren't the flat bodies of these creatures in this video actually the result of these soft bodies flattened by the cover slip on the microscope slide?
Okay soooo I listen to these as I go to sleep, I have been doing so for years, I do it with Scishow too. This being in Portuguese really messed with me, as I was half asleep. Did I accidentally change a setting or is this one just not in English? (Totally fine, I just won’t use it to fall asleep to 😂)
Is there no DNA testing for such Ciliates?? Wouldn't this elucidate the relative relationships of these organisms. Though any answers might depend on how much lateral gene transference occurs in the Protist Kingdom.
Often genome testing just makes things more confusing, especially when it comes to bacteria. Because the amount of horizontal gene transfer through the form of plasmids has resulted in a massive amount of genetic intermixing. This, in turn, makes it difficult to tease out what the actual ancestral relationships are between different bacterial species.
This is so interesting. I know that i am living with interesting creatures. Unfortunately, i am in a war against the biblebanger trump organisms and i cannot rest until they are subdued. Survival.
@@Shampoid no, sorry, when you set yourself up as an educational science channel, and make a point of introducing new terms or concepts-which was the situation here-it is inexcusable to misspell or mispronounce them, when the correct information can be found in moments with trivial effort.
In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. 2He was with God in the beginning. 3Through him all things were made; without him nothing was made that has been made. (John 1:1-3)
Claim your special offer for MagellanTV here: try.magellantv.com/journeytothemicrocosmos. Start your free trial today so you can watch “Life On Us: A Microscopic Safari” about exploring the creatures that live, compete, feed, on breed on the surface or in the depths of our body, and the rest of MagellanTV’s science collection: www.magellantv.com/video/life-on-us-a-microscopic-safari.
As ever with biology, when you look more closely at things, they always turn out to be weirder and more complicated than you thought.
And the frustrating thing is that people who took 4th grade bio thinks they know enough about biology to simplify gender and sexuality into XX and XY. Not quite related to the video at hand, but just as equally aggravating.
@@hausofjulian very true!
@@hausofjulian Yea, I know that feeling. And when you bring up the existence of intersex people they are often like " THATS JUST A RARE MUTATION AND DOES NOT COUNT !!! "
@@lifesymbiont5769 smh 🤦🏽♂️
But always more interesting
I wonder how many people I'd annoy if I took a picture of a comb jelly and labeled it "ciliate".
well, ur not wrong, comb jellies have a TON of hair
"The Tale of the Euplotes" sounds like a lecture in a course on ancient Greek history.
One thing I was thinking of... In a previous video, you mentioned that the water samples that are taken to look under the microscope are taken from around where James lives.
But one thing I was wondering, is exactly how the microcosmos changes in different environments. It would be so cool to see the similarities and differences between the organisms in a sample of water from a desert oasis, and a frozen lake; or from a salt water sample, a brackish water sample, and a fresh water sample.
Or even a sample from deep in a lake, and one from the lake's edge. I think such comparison videos would be pretty cool.
Actually on several videos they mentioned we were seeing organisms from samples taken from all kinds of places that were then sent to James. There was the beach sand and the samples from the coral farm for example, so it's not just samples from one area that we're seeing on the channel
Hello! I love the videos, just a suggestion.
When showing an organism that moves too fast normally to see, maybe show both the slow captures and the normal speed recordings, just to give us some idea?
Keep up the great work please!!
They're using slow captures in the video. The top left corner shows you the speed magnification. With these organisms, showing normal speed would be useless.
@@TheHighSpaceWizard Yes I am aware why and how to indicate when they slow down footage, I'm just thinking that seeing these organisms move naturally, even if very hard to see, would allow a little bit of insight to how this world is so different than ours.
The production quality on these videos is astonishingly good. It saddens me that you guys don't get more views.
Definitely the Spirotrichia Class is my favorite.
Like because you have added not only Spanish but Portuguese as well. Thanks a lot! I mean, I hear your videos in English but it's great you have added more audio languages. Also, videos are always amazing!
Wow, the clarity of the photography of Spirotrichia is incredible!
I can’t help but absolutely love how similar the humor that separates scientists 4+ decades apart is.
Hank: Science science science-
Me: It's blinking at me!
haha ikr
Some of these microbes remind me of my robot vacuum cleaner with its rotating brushes next to its “mouth”.
If you misclassify a euplotes, does that make it an explotes?
At 07:04, looking at the spirotrichia, the largest organelle and the two almost directly below it in the image seemed to be completely stationary, while the rest of the organism, its cilia and other inner bits are in motion. Why?
The vacuoles on that dividing spirotrichia made it look like some kind of animated Mardi Gras mask.
I wonder if the walking ciliate perceives the world in a 2D plane like we do.
You're missing a dimension there. We preceive in three dimensions.
@@sabatino1977 I think the 2D plane this person is referring to is the "floor", but since they live in water I don't think that's the case
Question: I noticed that vacuoles appear and disappear rapidly in some of these organisms. What is this phenomenon and why does it occur?
Water diffuses into the cells due to osmosis, and the cell has to pump it out so it doesn’t burst and die. The vacuoles fill up with water and are expelled, something like a bladder. I think explained this in one of their other videos but I don’t remember which
This might sound odd but with weed being legal in my state I know plenty of ppl that don't clean their bongs and stuff what's the water from a used smoke pipe like? Watching your awesome videos just gets me thinking about the microcosmos around me every day
Keep up the great stuff
Silly Ciliate... Hypotrichs are for kids!
Wow! This was so fascinating!
It’s hard to believe life is so tiny
We’re just very big
Thank you so much for your wealth of content! I know I can rely on your accurate descriptions to help identify what species I am looking at! I literally just typed ciliates that walk into Google and was brought here to confirm it's an Aspidisca! (Aren't they cute😍) Thank you for alleviating several hours of searching still pictures and not being sure.
I really like that you use morphology and microscopy to classify these ciliates but at a certain point you need to run PCR and sequencing to really know what your looking at. The price of these things used to be quite large but thermocyclers have come right down in price and presumably you already have a laminar flow and the BLAST database is freely available. Consider saving up for it
as some one who works with the microcosmos, yes.... and then add to that genetic info which then goes and changes everything yet again.
01:20 - what's going on with those vacuoles (????) in each half whilst it's dividing? Are they something to do with the division process?
Yipichaea whould be a fun name for a microorganism in a bruce willis film
Thanks for the awesome content!!
team Magellan for life. I imagine Magellan and History Hit having a war for control over the new youtube universe and ally myself fervently with team Magellan for no better reason than I like their advertisements more. I subscribe to neither.
Kind of like asking a colorblind person what shade of blue?
Ciliates are just the silliest.
And what are those glowing bodies in the Euplotes? I know that James is using fluorescence but just what is he making fluoresce?
What I learned from this video is that spirotrichia likes to run circles around itself. And that is enough.
YES!
New video
I love your videos
Enjoyed your video and I gave it a Thumbs Up
Would you please give the derivation of the word Hypotrich. Thanks.
do an episode on caulerpa maybe? easy to grow in your sw setups and crazy that its all one cell as i understand it. sea grapes will just like grow if not dead and you drop them in a sw tank and pin them so they wont blow around. be careful not to contaminate local water though!
Could someone explain what the smooth circles in the body of the ciliates are? They appear and then shrink.
@@rosulli thanks!
@@dracomaton what was the explanation? It appears that Roman's answer was deleted or hidden.
I can't remember the term, but they regulate the amount of water in the organism. Something vacuoles
@@dracomaton Thanks!
@@dracomaton --'Contractile Vacuoles. . .'
Neat.
Always enjoy these videos💚🔬🦠
Where does science stand with microbial DNA sequencing? How does it overlap with their taxonomy? How much variation is there within species?
It's difficult with single celled organism because of horizontal DNA transfer.
If a ciliate has cirri, should it be classified as a cirriate? 🤔
nice work guys
Amazing
Where do you go to get the microbe samples for your microscope 🔬 slides? I'd love to hear. Do you go to a pond? A Lil creek area while walking your dog? Just curious because I explore the woods with my dogs and it would be interesting to hear where things come from.
You can find microbes everywhere.
I literally saw one today!
Is that Hank Green?
The voice doesn’t sound like Hank but he sure does talk like him
Bad ass stuff. Keep it up.
is the audio jumping around or are my headphones being weird?
Where can I learn about microscopy techniques? I recently got a new microscope and I want to be able to learn all about them
Check out the Microbe hunter channel. It's very informative.
@@peterjf7723 thank you so much!
How is the sound in Br portuguese? I miss the original voice in english.
one question, aren't the flat bodies of these creatures in this video actually the result of these soft bodies flattened by the cover slip on the microscope slide?
a request: put the Italian audio track in all videos please ?.
Historian me: "huh, it just means few hairs, what's confusing bout that"
**watches further**
Ohhh.
Scientists: reveal me your secrets
Microcosmos: no
Okay soooo I listen to these as I go to sleep, I have been doing so for years, I do it with Scishow too. This being in Portuguese really messed with me, as I was half asleep. Did I accidentally change a setting or is this one just not in English? (Totally fine, I just won’t use it to fall asleep to 😂)
It's in English for me.
"it's good when scientists tell it like it is"
wish i had a microscope but they are too expensive for me :(
Is it possible for you to listen and record sounds made my microorganisms?
Commenting so the algorithm recommends this more
"say the line!"
"Thank you for coming on this journey with us"
5:10 spoiler alert! 🤣
2:21
Hank, buddy, relaaaaaaaaax. Long episodes are better.
I need help they r all over me and my dogs please help me I have to get rid of them I feel them moving inside of me please help
They’re slow walkers which makes them even more annoying.
Is there no DNA testing for such Ciliates?? Wouldn't this elucidate the relative relationships of these organisms. Though any answers might depend on how much lateral gene transference occurs in the Protist Kingdom.
Often genome testing just makes things more confusing, especially when it comes to bacteria. Because the amount of horizontal gene transfer through the form of plasmids has resulted in a massive amount of genetic intermixing. This, in turn, makes it difficult to tease out what the actual ancestral relationships are between different bacterial species.
What is this existence?
Mmm.
"...a ton fun to watch."
Your idea of fun and mine are different.
"I am God. Don't let the naysayers steer you incorrectly.."
I just call them motorized rice.
Euplotes?
...
...
...
...
...
EUPLOTEEZ CILIA!
lol gottem
Waarom praat je zo snel?
Second!
The traduction is too literal
13th!
Seventh just after 73rd
sixth
Why in god's name is my video in Portuguese?
The Spanish narration is not exactly great
73rd! 🥰😗😲😲😲😲😃😃😍😗😗
Fifth actually :)
@@kf10147 noce
This is so interesting. I know that i am living with interesting creatures. Unfortunately, i am in a war against the biblebanger trump organisms and i cannot rest until they are subdued. Survival.
Please use a dictionary. You can’t have cilia bundled into “a cirri.” The singular of cirri is cirrus.
calm down sir, its just a video on youtube
use a dictionary to define this ratio
@@Shampoid no, sorry, when you set yourself up as an educational science channel, and make a point of introducing new terms or concepts-which was the situation here-it is inexcusable to misspell or mispronounce them, when the correct information can be found in moments with trivial effort.
Also the preferred plural of "genus" is "genera". The video uses the easier to understand "genuses".
In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. 2He was with God in the beginning. 3Through him all things were made; without him nothing was made that has been made. (John 1:1-3)
Convergant evolution?
I need help they r all over me and my dogs please help me I have to get rid of them I feel them moving inside of me please help
I need help they r all over me and my dogs please help me I have to get rid of them I feel them moving inside of me please help