Journey to the Microcosmos - Season : 7

Season 7 Episode 1 - The Complicated Sex Lives of Hydra

If we were to write a fable to get this moral across, it would have to star the freshwater cnidarian called the hydra. Because in the hydra, the question of butts connects to the ambiguities of immortality, which in turn relates to the befuddling matter of sexual reproduction. Air Date : 29th-May-2023  Read More

Season 7 Episode 2 - When Is A Fungus Not A Fungus?

Oomycetes are one of the more unusual-looking microbes we’ve seen in the microcosmos. It looks more like a coral reef painted by an artist inspired by Gustav Klimt and a pile of trash. And if you saw that painting hanging in the museum, you might pass it by without thinking much of its subject. Air Date : 5th-Jun-2023  Read More

Season 7 Episode 3 - The Cryptic Origins of Yogurt

The microcosmos is home to many unusual partnerships. Life is, after all, just relationships, each of which build upon one another like strokes of paint in an epic tableau of ecology, epidemics, and yogurt? Air Date : 12th-Jun-2023  Read More

Season 7 Episode 4 - Why Beggiatoa Are Stuffed Full Of Sulfur

There’s a few things that give Beggiatoa away. The first is the simple serpentine shape of their bodies, and the second are those little dots inside of them. They look like bubbles, but they’re actually sulfur granules. Air Date : 19th-Jun-2023  Read More

Season 7 Episode 5 - We Don't Know Why Moth Wings Glow

A little while ago, James found himself with a bit of a problem. He was keeping some wheat grains at home to use as food for the microbes that he cultures and films for our enjoyment. But before he could feed the grains to his microbes, they became infested with the larvae.. of moths. Air Date : 10th-Jul-2023  Read More

Season 7 Episode 6 - Avoid These Tiny Bits of Killer Fluff (If You Can)

When you hear the phrase “brain-eating amoebas,” is there a particular image that comes to mind? Whatever you envision, it's probably not what the notorious brain-eating amoeba that strikes fear in our hearts actually looks like. Air Date : 17th-Jul-2023  Read More

Season 7 Episode 7 - This Neon World Is Inside Your Fruit

Usually we’re looking into pond water or whatever other fascinating bit of nature that James, our master of microscopes, usually looks at. But right now, our sights are coming to us directly from the kitchen and from a different master of microscopes. Air Date : 24th-Jul-2023  Read More

Season 7 Episode 8 - Up Close With The World's Deadliest Animal

Under the microscope, mosquitos undergo a metamorphosis sculpted in gold. The buzzing body takes on a life of its own, its usual role as menace lying far beyond the margins of the screen. Air Date : 31st-Jul-2023  Read More

Season 7 Episode 9 - Falling In Love With Microscopy

This video is all about James, who many of you know as our master of microscopes. He is the scientist, and the artist, behind just about everything we are able to see in our collective journey through the microcosmos. Air Date : 7th-Aug-2023  Read More

Season 7 Episode 10 - The Tiny Worlds Inside of Puddles

When was the last time you saw a puddle? Was it recent—perhaps some time in the past week, fresh from a downpour? Or has it been a long time since you’ve seen rain, and so an even longer time since your path has crossed a puddle? Air Date : 14th-Aug-2023  Read More

Season 7 Episode 11 - Why Are Some Birds Blue?

One of the spectacular details of animals in our world is just how varied their colors can be. When you look at birds, for example, you’ll see everything from mundane grays to iridescent blues. So why don’t we shine with the same iridescence of birds? Air Date : 21st-Aug-2023  Read More

Season 7 Episode 12 - The Electric Relationship Between Plants And Bees

When you think of bees, you probably don’t think of single-celled eukaryotes. What could an insect have in common with, say, a ciliate? Air Date : 28th-Aug-2023  Read More

Season 7 Episode 13 - Floating Cities of Scum

When you think of bees, you probably don’t think of single-celled eukaryotes. What could an insect have in common with, say, a ciliate? Air Date : 4th-Sep-2023  Read More

Season 7 Episode 14 - Liverworts Use The Rain To Make Their Clones

An ambiguously long time ago, there was this theory of medicine. An idea that if you came across a plant that looked like a body part, that meant it was meant to treat ailments that targeted said part. And this put a lot of pressure on liverwort, simply because it resembled the liver. Air Date : 11th-Sep-2023  Read More

Season 7 Episode 15 - Bacteria That Survive In Gelatinous Colonies

In the 1820s, a man named Dr. R. Brandes walked through a meadow on a quest to try and answer a centuries-old question about a mysterious gelatinous substance on the ground known as “star jelly.” Air Date : 18th-Sep-2023  Read More

Season 7 Episode 16 - Is It Possible To Photosynthesize In The Dark?

Our master of microscopes is always looking for rare ciliates that live in areas low in oxygen. But when he puts those samples under a growth light, his tubes quickly turn the color of the green sulfur bacteria that thrive in those anaerobic conditions. Air Date : 25th-Sep-2023  Read More

Season 7 Episode 17 - This Predator Is A Shape-Shifter

In the middle of the 19th century, a scientist stared into the microscope and found, staring back at him, a vampire. Air Date : 2nd-Oct-2023  Read More

Season 7 Episode 18 - Blood-Sucking Escape Artists

Of all the animals that we’ve examined in the microcosmos, leeches are probably one of the few that can be used as a verb, to leech off someone—to take and take from them, like a worm consuming someone’s blood. Air Date : 9th-Oct-2023  Read More

Season 7 Episode 19 - This Microscopic Killer Wears Its Victims

If you have been following Journey to the Microcosmos for some time, this might sound like a familiar story.| Consider this a proper slasher movie sequel. Air Date : 16th-Oct-2023  Read More

Season 7 Episode 22 - Can Microbes Just Appear Out Of Nowhere?

Can life be created spontaneously? Well, a year and a half ago, our master of microscopes, James, was inspired by the idea of spontaneous generation and set up his own little experiment. Air Date : 6th-Nov-2023  Read More

Season 7 Episode 23 - Trying To Solve Some Micro Mysteries

We Found Some Things We Can't Explain Today's episode has one particular theme: a bunch of funny things going on in the microcosmos. Air Date : 13th-Nov-2023  Read More

Season 7 Episode 25 - The History of Red Algae

Imagine that you aren’t watching the microcosmos right now. Instead you’re living in the world as it existed around one billion years ago, and you are the ancestor of this red algae. Air Date : 11th-Dec-2023  Read More

Season 7 Episode 27 - Why Picocyanobacteria Might Just Outlast All Of Us

In the northeast Atlantic Ocean, plankton populations aren’t looking like they used to. And at the center of it all are tiny, photosynthetic bacteria called picocyanobacteria who may just outlast us all. Air Date : 9th-Jan-2024  Read More

Season 7 Episode 28 - We Built A Tardigrade Trap, And It Worked

We don’t know if there are many rites of passage institutionalized among amateur microscopists. But we have to imagine that, as people find themselves navigating the microcosmos for the first time, they’re often on the lookout for tardigrades. Air Date : 15th-Jan-2024  Read More

Season 7 Episode 29 - The Microbial Universe That Makes Kombucha

When you think of kombucha, you might think of a nice, refreshing, healthy drink, one that’s exceptionall good for your microbiome. What we here at Journey to the Microcosmos think of is a terrarium…a place where a whole ecosystem exists, trapped in glass. Air Date : 22nd-Jan-2024  Read More

Season 7 Episode 30 - This Microbe Hasn't Been Seen Since The 1930s

After an absence of almost 90 years, we’ve found a rare ciliate last written about about in 1933. Air Date : 29th-Jan-2024  Read More

Season 7 Episode 31 - What Makes A Microbe Rare?

In the microcosmos—where the organisms vastly outnumber us, where what we find in a single pool of water can change from day to day—it makes us as what it mean for a microbe to be rare? Air Date : 12th-Feb-2024  Read More

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