Apologies for the weird dip in audio quality that happens for several seconds around 3:08. We tried fixing the audio a few different ways and it just wasn't working out, unfortunately. There are captions available if that section is too hard to understand.
@Gupie Dziecko That's the Complexly logo. We're produced by Complexly, a company that produces dozens of online educational series including SciShow, Crash Course, and more!
I also have a question - does Journey to the Microcosmos have a sound track somewhere I can buy? I know the music's by Andrew Huang, but I'd love the raw sound files.
Imagine if giraffes actually behaved like Lacrymaria. You're visiting the savanna, there are pieces of animal gore everywhere and suddenly a Giraffe whips it's neck between trees, bushes and rocks to eat a hippo or lion alive by swallowing it whole, it's neck stretching like a sock around the animal as it struggles to escape. I'd like to see Junji Ito make a story about that.
Hey james, thanks for your amazing work! Quick question: In this footage they seem to not attack and try to eat each other, is this an actual thing in their behaviour or this "sociality" is just random luck because they're not able to actually see/sense each other?
James you really should be proud of yourself man, you're spreading love and wonder for science far and wide with the proliferation of all the gorgeous imagery you produce.
That was very low-brow and unscientific terminology that I found to be superfluous and offensive. I will be reporting this video and this thread to Facebook.
@@Ezekiel_Allium She sells seashells by the seashore That tribute to Mary Anning, the discoverer of plesiosaurs, was written before this tribute (1908 vs. 1911). But when checking the dates, I discovered that _Lacrimaria Olor_ was first described in 1786 by Müller.
Lately, I've been contemplating the idea of a D&D campaign set underwater, with all amphibious player characters. Watching this video, it occurs to me that populating the oceans with giant bacteria - macro-micro-organisms, if you will - would be an interesting way to add variety to the campaign. As well as danger. A Lacrymaria the size of a horse would be a frightening thing to face. Its "neck" extending and coiling around corners up to 100 feet away. Probing coral reefs, sargassum clumps, or the halls of some sunken dungeon. Its attacking poisoning and grappling PCs, and trying to drag them back to be enveloped and digested.
You could also think about shrinking the characters. An adventure in a drip of water with playable water bears and rotifers and "giant" plankton bosses would also be interesting. Or do both ^^
I seem to remember an old Dragon Magazine article that had stats for a few of the microscopic beauties in a larger form. Can't remember what issue though.
And this thing is unicellular, meaning not only does it not have any muscles to move around and attack prey, but also no nerve cells to coordinate the motion.
Great example of how evolution rarely invents new things. Most things an animal cell can do are just specializations of something microbes already figured out.
@@LimeyLassen Don't forget the unicellular stage lasted 2.5 billion years, multicellular appeared 1.5 Billion years ago. The basic of life were well established when the first animal appeared.
imagine a macro-sized animal using lacrymaria's hunting method though a long tounge or tentacle that probes the forest floor looking for prey to ensare and drag back to the main nody of the aninal
I mean about as close as I can think is an anteater, and to a lesser extent chameleons. And in a way I guess you could say snakes? So I'd say if you take the long tongue hunting method of an anteater but made the tongue a 10 foot long snake that could eat it's prey whole, as lacrymaria and snakes can do, then you'd have it!
@@netsch20 The first thing I thought about seeing the lacrymaria was a cone snail. They also use a tube shaped protrusion, and use it to inject venom from it after finding a target. Maybe not a vertebrate, but it's definitely a macro sized animal with a very similar method of predation (and defense).
What amazes me most about microbes is how they're able to move and hunt for food with no brain and relatively simple bodies. This Lacrymaria with no brain is able to randomly hunt for food, has a sense of time and knows when to rest and when to hunt.
Hank, I know it's too late, but I didn't know this channel existed until you mentioned it shutting down in your latest video. I'm enthralled, and will be making my way back through these videos. How fascinating and beautiful. I hope the videos stay up, and maybe sometime in the future, it will be the right time to reinvest in this idea.
This channel is actually helping me study my Introduction to Cell Biology course. Seriously, keep it up! My GPA depends on it (JK, but it does help). Also, it's such a soothing channel, when I'm not being pulled into the drama of the microcosmos, which I love. Definitely one of my favourite channels on UA-cam!
Indeed, and I am very happy that something like that doesn’t exist in the world I walk around in daily. Imagine some sort of terrestrial Bobbit wormof 25 m long...
That's amazing! I came here from DDOI, and I think I'll stick around. You are a fantastic creator, and those microscopic creatures are amazing! It makes me wish I had the resources to make a little tank and just watch what slithers, slides, glides and swings by.
Today my daughter and I were looking at some standing water we took from a flower pot in our yard and we mostly saw these. They weren't listed in the booklet of microorganisms we were looking at, so I came to this channel to see if I could find what they are. This is so cool!
This is on of the most fascinating content I've seen lately. Please dont stop making videos, I was always interested of the Microcosmos and you're fulfilling my childhood dreams. Thank you.
I cannot imagine anything more terrifying than the concept at 4:37 - a predatory megafauna with no prey selection, no persistence but high efficiency; where no matter how quickly you move, how little noise you make, you stand just as much chance as any other living thing around you at any given moment of a gigantic neck whipping out from god knows where, taking a bite out of somewhere, anywhere, on your body, and then just leaving you, bleeding and helpless, for scavenger species to finish off. Absolute nightmare fuel. But, probably also driving a healthy ecosystem.
This is the second video I watch after finding your channel... I'm fascinated by this new world I'm getting to know in a different way, and looking forward to watch the rest of this beautiful channel
Ah, another microorganism I had no idea existed, but now I do and it’s SO cool and interesting! Just more to learn. Watching this is better than the nap I was going to take.
first of all WOW! one of the best episodes; wish we could zoom in even further on that first eating scene, and even play it slower so we could see the other organism merge with that of the Lacrymaria. Thank you.
You guys (and your new microscope) are amazing. These videos are entertaining as well as educative. Devoki, thankyou for your awesome choice of words and expression.
Impressive shots of an impressive organizm!!! 2:00 I love how we can see the spiral texture on its surface, probably it twists in order to elongate or shorten itself.
If what I'm seeing, less guppy like and more corkscrew/syphillis like (just looks side to side because flat) Don't know what kind of thing it actually is though, seems too big to be bacteria
I think a game where you take part in this micro ecosystem would be fun. Like people trying to grow and survive as a Tardigrade and multiple other creatures.
I was watching an amoeba eat a paramecium almost as large as itself in biology class in college when I noticed the paramecium developing cracks in its outer membrane. Shortly thereafter the amoeba stopped moving and began to rupture and release grainy fluids. When I was sure they were both dead I asked the instructor what was going on. He asked how long I'd been looking at the same slisde and I said ten or fifteen minutes. He said "When they do that, it means they're done." As in "The food is done." The slide got so hot under the lamp that it cooked them both.
we take movement like the lachrymaria's for granted among animals, but how the heck is it changing its cell size & dimensions with such rapidity and repeatability? Is it actually building & destroying microtubules? Using some sort of muscle analogue?
What is so odd to me is that these microbes have ”parts”, like not just organelles, but it has a clear ”head and neck” that doesnt just disolve into the main ”body”. How the heck does it work? More plz.
Would you like to do a video about phytoplankton? I am currently breeding Nannochloropsis salina for my marine aquarium. Isochrysis, Chlorella,Zooxanthellae or Noctiluca scintillans would be very interesting to see
Despite all that, I am still more amazed and taken aback by the slow, gigantic, mindbogglingly well structured rows of algae floating by, oblivious to everything.
That music change at about 2 minutes in was BRILLIANT!!! And these critters are pretty dang interesting indeed :D I do agree though, if giraffes had necks like THAT - and left a wake of dismembered victims - well let's just say I don't think even poachers would risk a safari anymore!!!
I got a simple compound light microscope recently and I’ve been having some trouble with it. Whenever I look into it the viewing portion is a really small window with black all around it, like I’m trying to look through a keyhole in a door while being on the other side of the room. It’s almost impossible to see anything. I figured if any online community would know what was going on it would be this one! Does anyone know what I’m doing wrong? Is that just what it’s supposed to look like?
Does all this activity and life occur just in the film of water squeezed between two slides? Like, dumb question, but doesn’t the slides squish the water around and thus increase the water pressure acting on the microbes 🦠?
@5:24 I know the lacrymaria is the star of this show but what are those little little (compared to the lacrymaria their little) worm like things in the bottom left corner, they move a little bit. So I'm just curious what are those?
This is amazing to watch. Seeing predatory behavior like this with a single-celled organism is incredible. It makes me think of every bit of water as a micro version of the African savannah, as it's compared to in the video. So much action in places I used to consider boring.
one interesting thing - how do they know not to attack each other? We see multiple Lacrymaria right next to each other and even see the neck of one brush right up against the body of another so they must be able to tell when something they actually want to eat is there.
This channel gives me the same feeling of reading Calvin and Hobbes comics. I feel both so big and so small all at the same time. All of this feels so important and yet so meaningless all at the same time.
Another amazing creature beautifully portrayed. I’m not from the US but I find it great that you are referring to videos that explain people how to vote. In many countries voting isn’t mandatory and so there is the chance that many citizens don’t have the chance or the information to make their voices heard. Participating in the vote is taking active part in the government of your country. Don’t forget a lot of good men and women have given their life in the past so each of us can now make our voice heard. Vote, it’s your right.
can you guys do a food chain video. like what is at the and the levels. 2:39 was it running away from a predator? also would like to see different things analogous to watching big cats hunting. if there are different strategies and see some things being eaten.
I have a question. I want to buy a microscope specifically a dark field microscope. The one I found says this: “Dry darkfield and brightfield Abbe condensers included”. I don’t know if this is the correct condenser to see images like JTTM show. Why it says “dry”? Thank youu
There’s something about the way these ones move that I find really unsettling. It’d be an excellent monster in a movie, crashing around a city and thrashing about its horrible neck thing.
Apologies for the weird dip in audio quality that happens for several seconds around 3:08.
We tried fixing the audio a few different ways and it just wasn't working out, unfortunately.
There are captions available if that section is too hard to understand.
@Gupie Dziecko That's the Complexly logo. We're produced by Complexly, a company that produces dozens of online educational series including SciShow, Crash Course, and more!
I also have a question - does Journey to the Microcosmos have a sound track somewhere I can buy? I know the music's by Andrew Huang, but I'd love the raw sound files.
Can you make a video on how to culture microbes. Like how to get a culture started, how to maintain them.
+thanks for the video and the vote info
I didn't notice at all, I was busy finding out how absolutely wild and fucked up these swan tears are... like an actual swan isn't scary enough haha!
The Lochness Monster is real I knew it! Its just a bit smaller than I imagined.
They come in big sizes too. I met one 2 weeks ago. Lochnessmonsta asked me for tree fiddy. Told him I ain't have it.
Now, I can't unsee that. lol
that's nae tha loch ness monter! nessie is huge! one o us scots has tae feed her every month
clearly a plesiosaur and not a giraffe.
Or maybe Loch Ness is actually a VERY small lake? The Scots are prone to exaggeration, you know?
Imagine if giraffes actually behaved like Lacrymaria.
You're visiting the savanna, there are pieces of animal gore everywhere and suddenly a Giraffe whips it's neck between trees, bushes and rocks to eat a hippo or lion alive by swallowing it whole, it's neck stretching like a sock around the animal as it struggles to escape.
I'd like to see Junji Ito make a story about that.
🤣🤣🤣🤣
nightmare materiaaaaal
SNEKGIRAFFE
I just love Lacrymaria, I am sure we'll be showing more clips of it in the future!
-James
maybe one in slow motion? I'd like to see that
Just watch your back, James!
Hey james, thanks for your amazing work! Quick question: In this footage they seem to not attack and try to eat each other, is this an actual thing in their behaviour or this "sociality" is just random luck because they're not able to actually see/sense each other?
James you really should be proud of yourself man, you're spreading love and wonder for science far and wide with the proliferation of all the gorgeous imagery you produce.
Lacrymaria are probably my favourite micro-sized animal
When he said "tardigrade orgy" it almost took me out.
Same XD he just skimmed through that like it's an everyday thing ....and it probably is
Deckardioneious Ghanax
when I say your pfp it almost took me out
I need eye bleach now
That was very low-brow and unscientific terminology that I found to be superfluous and offensive. I will be reporting this video and this thread to Facebook.
@@Is_there_no_one_else ❄
@@Is_there_no_one_else what the heck, this is just something that happens In nature
I would have thought more of a plesiosaur than a giraffe.
Had they been discovered at that time though?
More like a Tanystropheid
@@omnicognatee yes, the first plesiosaur (Would you believe it, its named Plesiosaurus) was describe in 1821
Totally what I thought. Plesiosaurs also have a similar "body shape".
@@Ezekiel_Allium She sells seashells by the seashore That tribute to Mary Anning, the discoverer of plesiosaurs, was written before this tribute (1908 vs. 1911). But when checking the dates, I discovered that _Lacrimaria Olor_ was first described in 1786 by Müller.
Lately, I've been contemplating the idea of a D&D campaign set underwater, with all amphibious player characters. Watching this video, it occurs to me that populating the oceans with giant bacteria - macro-micro-organisms, if you will - would be an interesting way to add variety to the campaign. As well as danger.
A Lacrymaria the size of a horse would be a frightening thing to face. Its "neck" extending and coiling around corners up to 100 feet away. Probing coral reefs, sargassum clumps, or the halls of some sunken dungeon. Its attacking poisoning and grappling PCs, and trying to drag them back to be enveloped and digested.
You could also think about shrinking the characters. An adventure in a drip of water with playable water bears and rotifers and "giant" plankton bosses would also be interesting.
Or do both ^^
Omg. This is lit
I was having similar thoughts for an underdark encounter, or perhaps a swamp creature of some kind
I seem to remember an old Dragon Magazine article that had stats for a few of the microscopic beauties in a larger form. Can't remember what issue though.
That is a genius idea! Mind if I modify it and borrow permanently?
As soon as he said tardigrade orgy my mom turned around and shouted “WHAT THE HELL ARE YOU WATCHIN”
Rafael Restrepo hahaha
"Mom, they're moss piglets. It's a moss piglet orgy!"
Lmao
Mama no, it's not what you think 😭
And this thing is unicellular, meaning not only does it not have any muscles to move around and attack prey, but also no nerve cells to coordinate the motion.
Mi 28 It has similar things, receptors and a citoskeleton
@@alejandroe.zunigasanchez259 Yeah, those things are a lot more complex than what we give them credit for.
But they respond to anesthesia, which is a complete misery for science
Great example of how evolution rarely invents new things. Most things an animal cell can do are just specializations of something microbes already figured out.
@@LimeyLassen Don't forget the unicellular stage lasted 2.5 billion years, multicellular appeared 1.5 Billion years ago.
The basic of life were well established when the first animal appeared.
imagine a macro-sized animal using lacrymaria's hunting method though
a long tounge or tentacle that probes the forest floor looking for prey to ensare and drag back to the main nody of the aninal
I mean about as close as I can think is an anteater, and to a lesser extent chameleons. And in a way I guess you could say snakes? So I'd say if you take the long tongue hunting method of an anteater but made the tongue a 10 foot long snake that could eat it's prey whole, as lacrymaria and snakes can do, then you'd have it!
@@netsch20 The first thing I thought about seeing the lacrymaria was a cone snail. They also use a tube shaped protrusion, and use it to inject venom from it after finding a target. Maybe not a vertebrate, but it's definitely a macro sized animal with a very similar method of predation (and defense).
Plesiosaur
Toads and frogs. Not that much as this bug, but in the style.
you can bet i’m doing this to my dnd party :)
What amazes me most about microbes is how they're able to move and hunt for food with no brain and relatively simple bodies. This Lacrymaria with no brain is able to randomly hunt for food, has a sense of time and knows when to rest and when to hunt.
Hank, I know it's too late, but I didn't know this channel existed until you mentioned it shutting down in your latest video. I'm enthralled, and will be making my way back through these videos.
How fascinating and beautiful. I hope the videos stay up, and maybe sometime in the future, it will be the right time to reinvest in this idea.
This channel is actually helping me study my Introduction to Cell Biology course. Seriously, keep it up! My GPA depends on it (JK, but it does help).
Also, it's such a soothing channel, when I'm not being pulled into the drama of the microcosmos, which I love. Definitely one of my favourite channels on UA-cam!
Lacrymaria are absolutely terrifying, and, for exactly that reason, my new favourite microorganism!
Indeed, and I am very happy that something like that doesn’t exist in the world I walk around in daily. Imagine some sort of terrestrial Bobbit wormof 25 m long...
I think they're cute!
Same here 100%
Having this turned up to 4K fullscreen satisfies the inner biologist in me SO much.
The way James loves and cares for these tiny creatures makes my heart melt.
That's amazing! I came here from DDOI, and I think I'll stick around. You are a fantastic creator, and those microscopic creatures are amazing! It makes me wish I had the resources to make a little tank and just watch what slithers, slides, glides and swings by.
I really do love the calming moment of oscillatoria... i can imagine Hanks best asmr voice over it too, very relaxing
Today my daughter and I were looking at some standing water we took from a flower pot in our yard and we mostly saw these. They weren't listed in the booklet of microorganisms we were looking at, so I came to this channel to see if I could find what they are. This is so cool!
This is on of the most fascinating content I've seen lately. Please dont stop making videos, I was always interested of the Microcosmos and you're fulfilling my childhood dreams. Thank you.
I cannot imagine anything more terrifying than the concept at 4:37 - a predatory megafauna with no prey selection, no persistence but high efficiency; where no matter how quickly you move, how little noise you make, you stand just as much chance as any other living thing around you at any given moment of a gigantic neck whipping out from god knows where, taking a bite out of somewhere, anywhere, on your body, and then just leaving you, bleeding and helpless, for scavenger species to finish off. Absolute nightmare fuel. But, probably also driving a healthy ecosystem.
This is the second video I watch after finding your channel... I'm fascinated by this new world I'm getting to know in a different way, and looking forward to watch the rest of this beautiful channel
A brilliant display and explanation of the Lacrymaria. A wonderful glimpse into the microscopic life of the Lacrymaria.
Ah, another microorganism I had no idea existed, but now I do and it’s SO cool and interesting! Just more to learn. Watching this is better than the nap I was going to take.
The most fascinating worlds are those that are mostly unseen. Thank goodness for channels like this
I had no idea this channel existed, thank you for mentioning it in VlogBrothers!
What you described sounds like my husband. Eating, noneating, thinking about eating and thinking about what he just ate.
Also almost all teenaged boys 😂
Good one...
lol
Idk how many times it's been said, but your new microscope looks amazing. Really brings everything to life.
first of all WOW! one of the best episodes; wish we could zoom in even further on that first eating scene, and even play it slower so we could see the other organism merge with that of the Lacrymaria. Thank you.
Heyyy!!! THIS ISN'T MICROSCOPIC GIRAFFES LIKE I THOUGHT!!
Fynn R. yes
To me, they look way more like snakes than giraffes... Snakes with very big butts, but snakes nonetheless...
Check out zefrank1's True Facts About Giraffes.
@@CSNCSNCSN
Well, all zefrank1 videos are worth watching. He's definitely one of the funniest UA-camr I know off!
Yes! I've been hoping for a chompy boy episode
Yes the chompy boi needs attention too.
You guys (and your new microscope) are amazing. These videos are entertaining as well as educative. Devoki, thankyou for your awesome choice of words and expression.
I think this is one of my favorite episodes I really enjoyed the footage you got with this one you guys are absolutely amazing
E.T. is feeling so inadequate right now.
Do you want my cell phone?
Gibran Henrique de Souza 👏👏👏 ✋
These videos are excellent and give an amazing insight into a world most of us can’t see.
I've seen all the seasons multiple times, and I have to say, Lacrymaria is my favourite one by far! It's just so beautiful to look at
Impressive shots of an impressive organizm!!!
2:00 I love how we can see the spiral texture on its surface, probably it twists in order to elongate or shorten itself.
Yeah! Was that shot with the new setup?
Yeah! It looks like some kinda mesh-based slinky.
My new favorite UA-cam channel
Whoa, I'm honestly really impressed by this thing. Watching it eat and rip other organisms in half was immensely fascinating.
7:47 i want to know what that little guppy like creature was swimming from the right to left.
If what I'm seeing, less guppy like and more corkscrew/syphillis like (just looks side to side because flat)
Don't know what kind of thing it actually is though, seems too big to be bacteria
@Dylan
I don't think it's a bacteria, but the size alone is not big enough to rule out bacteria.
I think a game where you take part in this micro ecosystem would be fun. Like people trying to grow and survive as a Tardigrade and multiple other creatures.
I only get excited about very few UA-cam updates: Chris Ramsay, That Chapter, JCS, and you guys. I highly appreciate your work!
This is so sick! It's incredible how everything is moving down there, a total rush of life!
Thank you for these videos! They are awesome. And thanks even more for the the voting info! So important.
I was watching an amoeba eat a paramecium almost as large as itself in biology class in college when I noticed the paramecium developing cracks in its outer membrane. Shortly thereafter the amoeba stopped moving and began to rupture and release grainy fluids. When I was sure they were both dead I asked the instructor what was going on. He asked how long I'd been looking at the same slisde and I said ten or fifteen minutes. He said "When they do that, it means they're done." As in "The food is done." The slide got so hot under the lamp that it cooked them both.
Wow this Spore update really improved the resolution.
i now want to make lacrymaria in spore
I don't know who writes the voice-over for these videos, but goddamn what a poet.
I binge watch UA-cam whenever a Journey to the Micro upload comes or a PBS Eons upload.
This so beautifully reiterates one of my daily affirmations:
Life's the most potent trip.
Beautiful microscopy work!
Incredible. I wonder if anyone has studied the physiology that makes hyper extending its “neck” possible.
we take movement like the lachrymaria's for granted among animals, but how the heck is it changing its cell size & dimensions with such rapidity and repeatability? Is it actually building & destroying microtubules? Using some sort of muscle analogue?
Great writing in this episode.
I feel calm and fascinated every time I watch your videos.
"Whats going on with that neck"
Music: im bout to answer you with beats
I've been wondering what these necky weirdoes are in my slides for a while! Thank you so much for this video!!!
I fricking love this channel, you're awesome sauce.
What is so odd to me is that these microbes have ”parts”, like not just organelles, but it has a clear ”head and neck” that doesnt just disolve into the main ”body”.
How the heck does it work?
More plz.
WOW, ISN'T THIS SOO FOCUSED AND HIGH QUALITY!
Finally, a lacrymaria episode! My favorite microbe!
Would you like to do a video about phytoplankton? I am currently breeding Nannochloropsis salina for my marine aquarium. Isochrysis, Chlorella,Zooxanthellae or Noctiluca scintillans would be very interesting to see
I'm a U.S. citizen and I'd like to know how to become a Lacrymaria.
Don't forget to vote twice!
Love your amazing videos! :D
No channel on UA-cam will be this amazing 🙏
_What_ structures in its neck? Without muscles as we know them, _how_ does it move its neck? 🤔
Calcium ions
@@chloroplast8611 can you explain further?
While I can't say for sure, I'd imagine it's not too far off from how individual muscle cells can expand and contract.
Despite all that, I am still more amazed and taken aback by the slow, gigantic, mindbogglingly well structured rows of algae floating by, oblivious to everything.
UGGH, I forgot how relaxing this channel is!
That music change at about 2 minutes in was BRILLIANT!!!
And these critters are pretty dang interesting indeed :D
I do agree though, if giraffes had necks like THAT - and left a wake of dismembered victims - well let's just say I don't think even poachers would risk a safari anymore!!!
Superb clips, super music, and super narration.
Excellent work James👍
More like "The Tears of Every Other MIcrobe It Meets", I say.
you're doing great work.
I got a simple compound light microscope recently and I’ve been having some trouble with it.
Whenever I look into it the viewing portion is a really small window with black all around it, like I’m trying to look through a keyhole in a door while being on the other side of the room.
It’s almost impossible to see anything.
I figured if any online community would know what was going on it would be this one!
Does anyone know what I’m doing wrong? Is that just what it’s supposed to look like?
Does all this activity and life occur just in the film of water squeezed between two slides? Like, dumb question, but doesn’t the slides squish the water around and thus increase the water pressure acting on the microbes 🦠?
Can we talk about how lit the BGM is especially at 2:05 with that techno drop
I was actually going to comment on how I really didn't like that change of music, I guess you can't please everybody.
this account is so relaxing. great content.
@5:24 I know the lacrymaria is the star of this show but what are those little little (compared to the lacrymaria their little) worm like things in the bottom left corner, they move a little bit.
So I'm just curious what are those?
This is amazing to watch. Seeing predatory behavior like this with a single-celled organism is incredible. It makes me think of every bit of water as a micro version of the African savannah, as it's compared to in the video. So much action in places I used to consider boring.
awwww you guys remembered my birthday :^)
Mathew Nelson happy belated birthday
my biology Teacher showed me images of these Lacrymaria long ago, i already forgot these exist
This is an amazing channel ❤️
What is that creature spinning around at 2:14 ? It looks like it has chloroplasts in it but I've never seen that before
THANK YOU HANK FOR THE PLUG AT THE END! HAPPY TO KNOW YOU CARE ABOUT THIS COUNTRY'S WELL-BEING!
The microscope puts up better quality than vertically-filmed videos on the internet.
one interesting thing - how do they know not to attack each other? We see multiple Lacrymaria right next to each other and even see the neck of one brush right up against the body of another so they must be able to tell when something they actually want to eat is there.
This channel gives me the same feeling of reading Calvin and Hobbes comics. I feel both so big and so small all at the same time. All of this feels so important and yet so meaningless all at the same time.
Another amazing creature beautifully portrayed. I’m not from the US but I find it great that you are referring to videos that explain people how to vote. In many countries voting isn’t mandatory and so there is the chance that many citizens don’t have the chance or the information to make their voices heard. Participating in the vote is taking active part in the government of your country. Don’t forget a lot of good men and women have given their life in the past so each of us can now make our voice heard. Vote, it’s your right.
I love this channel... thank you
Interesting creature. Bravo for broadcasting voting info.
This is the wildest one yet. So glad there are no macro-Lacrymaria.
Wow I love these journeys!
Can anyone tell me that in where can be found this organism?
can you guys do a food chain video. like what is at the and the levels. 2:39 was it running away from a predator? also would like to see different things analogous to watching big cats hunting. if there are different strategies and see some things being eaten.
how do single celled organisms get energy to the cilia?
I have a question. I want to buy a microscope specifically a dark field microscope. The one I found says this: “Dry darkfield and brightfield Abbe condensers included”. I don’t know if this is the correct condenser to see images like JTTM show. Why it says “dry”? Thank youu
How does the neck to body ratio compare to sauropods?
Cells that sleep! What a concept!
There’s something about the way these ones move that I find really unsettling. It’d be an excellent monster in a movie, crashing around a city and thrashing about its horrible neck thing.
Did you use a phase contrast microscope lens for this video?
And I wonder if I dyed the color.
I suggest to indicate the time compression. If none, then these creatures are much faster than I would have thought.