Instructional Video8:34
Journey to the Microcosmos

Giant Microscopic Cannibals

9th - Higher Ed
Every experiment has to start somewhere. This one began with a container full of dying microbes, and the five cute, pink ciliates called blepharisma that James, our master of microscopes, accidentally turned into a group of cannibals.
Instructional Video6:59
Journey to the Microcosmos

The Aquatic Snails That Leave a Path of Destruction

9th - Higher Ed
It’s often said that one person’s trash is another person’s treasure. And surely there is no greater proof of that than the home of our master of microscopes, James. All along the windowsills and bookshelves are jars and tanks full of...
Instructional Video9:13
Journey to the Microcosmos

We Accidentally Grew Crystals

9th - Higher Ed
We'd love to learn more about our Microcosmos community and who's out there watching these videos. So, we've got a short survey for you to fill out where you can let us know more about you and what you'd like to see from Journey to the...
Instructional Video6:51
Journey to the Microcosmos

Ghost Fleas: Tiny See Through Cyclopses

9th - Higher Ed
Depending on your love of horror stories or your belief in the supernatural, it might be easy to convince you that lakes are full of ghosts. That as you plunge deeper into these lakes’ depths, you’ll come across translucent bodies that...
Instructional Video6:25
Journey to the Microcosmos

Sand Is Full of Life and Death

9th - Higher Ed
James, our master of microscopes, gets samples of sand from beaches all over the world to help in his quest to learn more about interstitial ciliates—the single-celled organisms that live in the watery pockets that exist between grains...
Instructional Video8:15
Journey to the Microcosmos

Aeolosoma: Polka-Dotted Vacuum Worms

9th - Higher Ed
Worms, despite their seemingly simple bodies, are a diverse bunch. Which is why we thought that for today, it might be fun to visit with a less famous worm, and like one of those relatives you don’t know very much about, but every time...
Instructional Video7:31
Journey to the Microcosmos

The Moss Animals That Are Defined by Their Butts

9th - Higher Ed
At first glance, they seem a bit more like plants or a series of flowers with thin, elegant petals. But no, they are indeed an animal. One that has the dubious honor of being defined largely by its anus.
Instructional Video7:30
Journey to the Microcosmos

Water Mites: Sticky Dancers with Crystal Poop

9th - Higher Ed
The microcosmos might seem like a safe place from a surprise spider attack, but it would be misleading to pretend that it’s completely free of spider-like sightings. Because even at this small scale, you could find yourself subject to an...
Instructional Video6:39
Journey to the Microcosmos

The Illuminating Reason Perenema Curl Up Into a Ball

9th - Higher Ed
Watching this Peranema feels a bit like watching a cat waffling back and forth between whether or not it wants to take a nap. Sometimes the Peranema stretches, its body undulating into an elongated, indescribable geometry as its flagella...
Instructional Video4:46
Journey to the Microcosmos

Our Tardigrades Got Stuck in a German Post Office

9th - Higher Ed
Tardigrades have been through a lot. They’ve been sent to the moon. They’ve had the moisture sapped out of them. At times, they’ve been in extreme heat. And at other times, they’ve had to contend with extreme cold. Well, today, we’ve got...
Instructional Video7:47
Journey to the Microcosmos

Water Is Thicker When You’re Smaller

9th - Higher Ed
Water Is Thicker When You’re Smaller
Instructional Video7:38
Journey to the Microcosmos

These Algae Curl Up Into a Ball When They Get Stressed Out

9th - Higher Ed
These Algae Curl Up Into a Ball When They Get Stressed Out
Instructional Video39:53
Journey to the Microcosmos

The Microscope Upgrades We've Made Along The Way | Compilation

9th - Higher Ed
This channel wouldn’t be what it is if it weren’t for one very key invention: the microscope. Everything we see, we see with the aid of light and lenses, expertly deployed by our master of microscopes, James. And if you’ve been on this...
Instructional Video7:01
Journey to the Microcosmos

These Squishy Dots Move So Fast You Might Miss Them

9th - Higher Ed
From our vantage point, as relatively large organisms, it can be easy to overlook the microcosmos, because it’s simply too small to see. It floats in front of our eyes at all times, and yet we cannot make out details until we turn to...
Instructional Video7:11
Journey to the Microcosmos

These Walking Ciliates Are Frustrating

9th - Higher Ed
The ciliates we’re going to talk about today are kind of…frustrating. At this point in our journey, we’ve gotten used to the fact that the microcosmos is an indecipherable mess at times, filled with organisms that look like each other,...
Instructional Video7:32
Journey to the Microcosmos

The Shared Doom of Microscopic Hitchhikers

9th - Higher Ed
Our oceans and lakes are filled with copepods, a myriad of small crustacean species that might float as plankton or infect other creatures1. And as they’re living in whatever manner best suits them, some copepods—like our friend...
Instructional Video8:08
Journey to the Microcosmos

Why Are These Single-Celled Organisms So Large?

9th - Higher Ed
One day, James—our master of microscopes—was cleaning the marine tanks that some of his organisms live in when he noticed this creature. It was hard to miss given that it was visible to the naked eye, thanks to both its bright red color...
Instructional Video7:01
Journey to the Microcosmos

The Collotheca Doesn’t Mind Eating Its Own Babies

9th - Higher Ed
Imagine that this is the beginning of the last thing you’ll ever see, an empty landscape with thin lines scratched across it. But those lines suddenly sharpen and gather into a dense mass that spreads from the crown that sits atop a...
Instructional Video14:37
Journey to the Microcosmos

Can This Baby Rotifer Escape Before It’s Eaten Alive?

9th - Higher Ed
This Loxodes magnus is large, so large that it was able to eat a rotifer, those funny animals we often see getting bullied by their single-celled neighbors. Except, that rotifer is moving. It’s alive, twisting and turning inside of the...
Instructional Video11:07
Journey to the Microcosmos

What Even Is A Species?

9th - Higher Ed
If you know about the species Lacrymaria olor, then you know what you’re getting when you see it under a microscope. It has a distinct shape, a distinct way of life—the combination of its own genetics and its surrounding environment.
Instructional Video7:45
Journey to the Microcosmos

Putting Coral Under the Microscope

9th - Higher Ed
James, our master of microscopes, recently received a package from a coral farm in Germany. We’ve explored some of the microscopic creatures and bristle worms that were living and thriving in those packages in previous videos. But today...
Instructional Video8:04
Journey to the Microcosmos

How Brownian Motion Helped Prove the Existence of Atoms

9th - Higher Ed
We’re going to see a type of motion over and over again because it’s all over the microcosmos, found in and around many different types of organisms. And this kind of random motion may seem almost too trivial to discuss, but this motion...
Instructional Video8:21
Journey to the Microcosmos

Kentrophoros: The Mouthless Ciliate With a Back Full of Snacks

9th - Higher Ed
This is kentrophoros, a ciliate that James—our master of microscopes—had been searching for, receiving samples from all over the world in the hopes of finding it gliding around. When you first look at it, it doesn’t seem particularly...
Instructional Video10:30
Journey to the Microcosmos

The 18th Century Tardigrade Debate

9th - Higher Ed
If you’ve ever wondered what it might take to upset a microscopist, just ask James—our master of microscopes—his feelings about tardigrade legs. Yes, tardigrade legs. Those chunky, wiggly limbs that move their owner through meals of moss...