This Extremely Rare Ciliate Has Only Been Seen Four Times
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- Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
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If you’ve been following James, our master of microscopes, on some of his other platforms, then you know what’s coming. You know that James has published his first academic paper, it's about this extraordinarily rare ciliate that you see now called Legendrea loyezae.
You can check out “The Extraordinarily Rare Ciliate Legendrea loyezae” at www.sciencedir...
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We've restocked our microscopes at microcosmos.store/ and we now have a model with plan achromatic objectives. And if you’ve previously purchased a Microcosmos Microscope and would like to upgrade your objectives from achromatic to plan achromatic, we also have a 4 pack of plan objectives for sale!
James got this rare sighting done in 4K/60FPS. I think that's a first. I am astonished. One for the books :D
Are there any good books with most species of macroscopic organisms and images and descriptions of each of them?
"Science is done to subside the mind's curiosity, not to incite discord in one's rather short lifespan." This is quotable, very much so, is this James's or Hank's?
@@thaphreak It's from the paper, so it comes from James Weiss
Since im Polish, im ofc wandering
What's James doing in Warsaw?
he does his studies there, so he lives there, or was it temporary specifically related to searching for this species?
Simply amazing. Not only that it is so rare, but it also looks quite peculiar. Like a small single-celled squids
This is the first protist I would describe as cute
I used to think Rodney the Rotifer was adorable - this guy looks like a microscopic space capsule and yes, cute. Congrats to James and many more discoveries in the future!
@@dianahowell3423 thank youuuuu! ❤
real
I thought if squids, too!
Hank has the perfect narrator voice. It’s so pleasant and precise at the same time. Relaxing.
His sci show voice is super annoying though
@@Stierenkloot brutal! Lol i believe his sci show voice is his "OOOH SCIENCE!!! 🤠" voice and this is his "ah, science 😌" voice.
@@VeriVeronika well put
@@Stierenkloot Many, many SciShow subscribers disagree with you.
would be really intersting if james can get more of those from his sample source, examine their reproduction and can catch it for sequencing of its genome. Would be very interesting to know from a genetic point of view to which species this organism relates to.
That's what I was thinking, examine their genome!
We already did that! Check the paper please. :)
@@jamesweiss6745 Will do, thanks
@@jamesweiss6745 Hey, yes you did examine the ribosomal RNA, sorry, look only afterwards a look. But as I understood you were only able to make limited taxonomic classification, right? Of course mutations of the ribosomes are rare (due to high selective pressure on this fundamental enzyme) and are therefore a good thing one can keep track of trough evolutionary history. However, without the complete ribosomal subunit you may can't unambigously distinguish the speciation events between close relatives, right?
It’s actually kinda beautiful. Like a blue microscopic squid swimming thru the sea. The bumps on the end of their stalks/tentacles remind me of the tiny drops of dew found on the hairs of the carnivorous sundew plant.
Way to go, James!! Well done! 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
wrong, we've all now seen it, soon to be hundreds of thousands!
edit: other techniques? are we going to get some cryo-SEM? :D
Ohh since I found only 4 cell, I wasn’t able to “play around” with them but hopefully in the future!
+++
Congrats James!
It's funny, I can see the footage shown around 2:00 and not be grossed out at all.
Yet if I saw that same thing on bug scale I'd KILL IT! *KILL BRING FIRE!*
Moved by the soul of a lost heart
Interesting fact: Emmanuel Fauré-Frémiet, who first discovered the species, is the son of Gabriel Fauré, the well-known French composer. The etymology of the genus Legendrea is possibly René Legendre (1880-1954), a fellow member of the French zoological society.
Amazing! Thank you for the extra information!
Mademoiselle Marie Loyez was another author of microscopic studies at the time.
We did know about René Legendre but we cannot be sure if that’s the reason behind the name, so we couldn’t include it in the paper. Thank you for the explanations anyway. I love Gabriel Fauré’s music!
@@pattheplanter I had no idea about this and it might be perfectly possible. Pity we cannot know more.
@@JamsGerms congrats!
So let me say. This has only been seen FOUR times? And James got this IN 4K60FPS?!?!
he is now a microbial legendrea
Nope, you are mistaken
😊
5 all together
Documented and published. Not seen. Very very very very very very very different.
Huge congratulations to James on publishing his paper! A true Master of Microscopes!
Thank you! ❤
Also, I’ll be answering to your questions, please feel free to ask me. :)
-James
Can I collect good samples in the Skaryszewski Park in winter?
Are the original ones you found still alive?
@@sknoy7792 Yes! I just broke the ice on the small pond there, you can access it easily before it freezes again! :D
@@osmia Ohh no, they are all gone! :(
@@jamesweiss6745 Such is life.
That is so cool, congratulations James for this discovery!! Admire your dedication to observing these tiny guys
Thank you! 😊
Wow wow wow 😀, congratulations to James for discovering this. And the quote at the end was amazing
Right! I’ve never thought about it that ways and it actually freaked me out a bit 😂 We took the little critters hostage and hijacked their dna 😭
🤔😮😨
Isn’t it amazing how such a tiny little thing can create such huge excitement in the mind of the human being who discovers it?!? Congratulations James on your discovery!
Cheers
Thank you so much! ❤
This is like a legendary pokemon sighting, but James is so amazing that he filmed a full length movie for us.
Here's to more awesome discoveries.
Just found your channel. Also, just added another branch of science that I am enthralled by! Thanks for posting all this great knowledge!
Well done James!!!!! So very glad for you to have completed this first paper - may it be one of many and may your dedication always bring you wonder and happiness as well as recognition in the field! Great big hugs too!
I think by next Summer, you'll have a million subscribers; can't wait. You guys deserve it!
Any time the topic of the universe and it's large scale gets brought up... I enjoy pointing out ( thanks to you guys ) that the universe is actually larger if you zoom IN, rather than zoom OUT.
I'll say "if you zoomed out equally as many times as you zoomed into the tip of your finger... You could continue zooming into your finger almost 25% more, than zooming out into the universe".
This is usually followed by people starring at the tip of their index finger in astonishment.
All thanks to you!
Tare care!
I would request that you look at your comment again and either rephrase it in a way that makes more sense to a fellow viewer of this channel or add explanations and definitions. For starters, what scale are you zooming by? Linear? logarithmic?
Secondly; what point are you defining as being unable to zoom in or out further?
Where does this 25% come from?
To my understanding the Plank length is the smallest defined length, while the ultimate size of the Universe is currently unknown and likely will forever remain unknown as so much of its total size appears to be outside of the region in which the speed of light and the age of the universe allows us to view.
To be clear, I am not trying to discredit your claim, however I feel it is sorely lacking definition.
@@susanlemmey4012 the 25% comes from the total atoms of the universe; 10 to the power of 78. If you take that scale and traveled into space by that power versus traveling inward, into your finger 10 to the power of 124; it's bigger.
The EASIEST way I can think to explain to you is...
If you were sitting at a table and had a telescope pointing up at the stars, and a microscope focused on a leaf.
And with each device, you're going to theoretically zoom in by 10x
You will hit the edge of the universe, before you hit plank length.
An easy way for you to confirm this is Search
"How many atoms in the universe"
"How big is a plank length"
"How big is the universe"
"What is the speed of light"
Learning those 4 things, you will understand.
***However. Since we have given a theoretical limit to "smallness" I.E. Plank Length.
And since the universe is continuiously expanding; the same of "zooming in being bigger than zooming out being bigger", won't be the case forever.
A nifty thought however is as the universe continues to expand, it will eventually reach the identical inverse of plank length.
I hope someday, someone calculates when that'll happen and humanity will celebrate "The Moment Of Universal Inverse Measurement Equivalence"
@@TheTechAdmin I'm new to the channel loved this episode and your comment.....WoW.....Love it.....Wonder how long it would take my slowly expanding mind to reach plank length.
@@Breca Plank length is extremely small. Your brain is extremely big in comparison.
Your brain can't *_expand_* to reach plank length; but it could *_condense_* to reach plank length
Ooh, so I think what you mean is that the atoms and subatomic particles making up your finger are, for their scale, going to take longer to totally zoom in on to the point where you can't anymore, than going outward into the universe until you cant anymore while excluding the dimensions of your finger. Things are just that small
Oh wow! This is going to sound crazy but I think I have found this one too! At least if our identification was accurate. This was during a course I took in the first half of 2019, Comparative Biology of Protists, at the University of Buenos Aires. We took samples from a nearby natural reserve next to the Río de La Plata estuary, one of the samples being from a shallow stagnant freshwater pond, below the tree canopy , without much access to sunlight and if i'm not mistaken rather high conductivity values (930 μS/cm). And in that sample we found this very cool looking ciliate, it was like nothing we ever saw before, with terminal tentacles and a big vacuole near their base. We asked our teacher in charge of the lab class, a cilliate taxonomist, what was it, but she couldn't recognise it. This was remarkable as she would always quickly identify anything we showed to her. We had to bring up an old German book on protist diversity and we eventually settled in that it would be a Legendrea sp. as it matched the drawings the closest. We knew it was rare but not to this level!
I got a photo of it. Is there a way to contact James to share him the photo and see if he can confirm our finding? would be awesome if it was one of them the one we got to see.
That’s wonderful!!! Can you send me the photo on Instagram please?
@JourneytotheMicrocosmos please see above comment!! @superetendard you can probably find an email or something if you look up the paper!
@@vaizluca James also runs Jam's Germs, I haven't sent it yet but going to do soon 🙂
OK this has piqued my interest! Did you send the photo? Did James confirm it was Legendrea? D=
Commenting to stay updated :D
Do you accept water samples? I have a tiny bit from a recent trip to the Sea of Galilee :-)
God, I love ciliates. Who else agrees?
👍
Yessir
Personaly, I don't *know* ciliates well enough to say that I love them.
I'm *infatuated* maby? ☺️
not when they are amoebas eating gray matter in the brain.
God I fucking hate ciliates so goddamn much. Useless fucking wastes of space. The amount of sheer rage I feel towards them is unreal
If it was named by a Frenchman then it was probably 'Legendre'-a rather than, as you're reading it, 'Legend'-rea...
"Loyez" is the French word for rent, whether that's relevant or not I don't know... maybe it was to honour his landlord!
Makes sense! Thank you!
Good parsing. In case you missed them Augustin Roche commented: Interesting fact: Emmanuel Fauré-Frémiet, who first discovered the species, is the son of Gabriel Fauré, the well-known French composer. The etymology of the genus Legendrea is possibly René Legendre (1880-1954), a fellow member of the French zoological society.
My reply was that "Mademoiselle Marie Loyez was another author of microscopic studies at the time."
Okay, don’t mind me but despite this being microscopic … it’s sort of cute in a way! Also fun hearing and seeing about such a monumental find. I haven’t been this curious about the microscopic world in a long time and this channel has lit that spark again, and all because of this curious creature!
Thank you to everyone involved 😊
Beautiful footage that also offers a well of information about a very little-known creature. Congratulations!
Very cool. Paleontology finds itself in a similar situation, with paleontologists realizing that what they thought were separate species are actually juveniles.
This was also the story of mosquito larvae at one point, if I'm not mistaken. A creature doesn't have to be invisible or extinct to be weird like that
Congrats on the historical discovery! Just bought a beginner microscope because of you guys. I’ll move up to a better one when I get better!
Imagine finding an organism, randomly naming it "legend", then it turns out to actually be super rare. Now that's cool.
I dont remember when I subscribed. It feels like a long time. I distinctly remember the "rivers inside us" quote from you. I absolutely adore the poetic nature of your commentary, the quality of videos, the fact that James lives in Warsaw and the fact I subscribed to your channel.
The news about the paper excite me, I feel really proud to have been accompanying you on this Journey.
Congratulations and thank you.
Congratulations on the find. I'm happy to be on this journey with you since 2019 and have fun/find new species
It is pretty amazing to me that simply living his life doing the things he loves, James has probably become the greatest expert on this rare creature. Simply because he loves this means he is able to find more.
Congratulations and well done, James! May this be the first of many discoveries!
Trivia: I enjoy going to a local "horse pulling" contest in a small village nearby, in the spring.
The horses seem to ENJOY the challenge of pulling heavier and heavier dead loads (no wheels).
And ...
when they struggle, the shape of their bodies change.
That is so cool! Congratz on the paper Oh Master of Microscopes!
Definitely cute enough to use as a low maintenance pet.
How exciting - thank you for allowing us to share in this wonderful discovery with you. As always such a magnificent presentation offset with perfect narration and finished with wise words.
What?? Microcosmos microscopes?? I subbed you guys when you was sub 100k and this is the first I've heard of a branded microscope
What an amazing episode! I‘m going to check out the paper and am super excited for the next episode too :D
I really don’t understand how these little things, so many of them, can ever be identified so precisely just by looking at them. I’d think a DNA sample would be needed.
5 times now
this is totally beside the point but as a mythology buff i find it so cool that legendrea bellerophon is named for the greek hero who killed the chimera with a pole covered in a ball of hot lead-- a shape similar to the extended tentacles of the organism!
That's really interesting. I tend to chuck samples after a few days as the diversity of organisms declines, but maybe I'm chucking them too fast!
this is perhaps the earliest i've ever been to any video. im so excited to see this rare ciliate!
Oh boy, a new microcosmos episode!!
I always save these for when I’m really really lit. Couldn’t ask for anything better .
Let us take a moment to appreciate the barb in that final sentence from the paper. It is inspirational; it's also a pretty direct criticism of the way academic research works in the modern world of grants and grant based hiring and tenure decisions.
Searching for the whimsical in the real world has never been easier then following this channel. I am awed and inspired.
Congratulations James! Both amazing accomplishments; super happy for ya. Great work from the team too as always. Another awesome video
I was reading the paper and it said he hand picked the cell for DNA extraction. How do you hand pick a single cell??? He then washed it with mineral water several times. How do you do that without accidentally losing the super rare cell??? What tools do you need to do this? I'm just flat out amazed.
12 minutes after i decide to watch your entire catalogue, i get a new upload ^^
keep being you wont you
The Journey has subsided some curiosity. And also created more! I ditched my attachment to driving and only bike since age 55 cataractS and only one eye's implant monocular surgery. .Yeah, with human & vehicle density it's pretty hard toj observe the last of Pinellas County's dwindling biodiversity from the road, and NO, our expedited watershed needs no more impermeable roads! mnd only bike a 1970 Fuji. I will be sampling wet, living soils.. I carry a 60x-75x lighted pocket microscope in a tool, spare tube and 1st aid/ general fastener collection....I've loose screws 🙄😁, baggies, bulbed pipettes, capped vials and a kitchen sink.
Less insects/bee's knees, On to aquatic and esruarine single cell scopes, or 96 cell(Tardigrade cell ct.?)....✌️
Thank you James, Hank and all whom helped.
Congrats to James on getting published!
OMG, Hank I love you and your narration, but please check with someone how to pronounce foreign names. I can just about forgive you mispronouncing Kreutz as “croots” (it’s actually more like “croyts”) but Jankowski? Your master of microscopes lives in Poland! I’m sure you talk on Teams or Zoom often, surely you could have checked with him that Jankowski is pronounced “yankovski”.
Me: *knows almost nothing about microorganisms*
Also me: “A.W. Jankowski SPLIT Legendrea into 3 genera with NO additional observations of their own??? Scandalous.”
I wonder if they are really rare or if we are looking in the wrong regions/habitats. Like searching an animal in the middle of the desert altough it lives in the oasis...
Not really, they are just low in numbers. I spent years sampling the same spot to find four cells.
BRB I’m changing my name to Legendrea.
Nice discoveries! Go James!!! 👍😀👍
Thank you!!
My first thought was microscopic cephalopods... I've not been this excited about microscopic things since I was a Veterinarian Technician and in Zoology class.
It surprises me that a microorganism can be so rare. Is it because Legendreas don't reproduce very often? Has anyone observed them reproducing at all?
I know nothing of micro-biology but this really inspires me to go and collect samples from my local water sources.
I feel that Legendrea is a very appropriate name for such a rare or “legendary” microbe, something that only a handful of people will ever see with their own eyes, or rather their own eye, peering through a microscope.
It’s funny because of course it’s a total coincidence, when a scientist discovers a new microbe, especially in 1903, they have no way of knowing how rare it will be.
I just found this channel on RUclips and immediately became a subscriber. A fascinating channel which I highly recommend to all with curious minds.
Que tradução bizarra foi essa? Colocaram uma "pessoa/robô" que não sabe português tentando falar um português horrível.
Não tinha uma maneira melhor de fazer isso não?
Ficou realmente péssimo.
Really amazing thing is that "Legendrea" sound like "legend-rare" and this species is actually true.
(Sorry for my poor English)
I straight teared up at the end. Thank you Hank and everyone who make this channel happen.
Crazy to think that the chances someone is looking at us in the same form under some microscope or perhaps macroscope or would it be micro to them too since they’d be bigger. Rabbit hole thought.
Omg this is so exciting!!!! James has made a contribution to taxonomy!!! 😆😆😆🤯
I love this channel more than I can express. Wonderful job guys
That really is cool tho that there even are "rare" ciliates
So this guy just randomly named the thing he found "legendrea" and it ended up being so rare it's nearly a legend?
Is no one else thinking that it sounds like all those different taxonomies are actually the one ciliate?
Quick question - after I download this video in the English setting, the file is saved with a spanish audio track instead.....does anyone have an idea how this happened? No other YT channels have had this problem for me.
Being a microbiologist is literally just collecting irl Pokemon
I absolutely LOVE your channel, thank you!
I’m looking for reference books. Could you recommend some?
Great job, James! I just got to grad school myself in biomedical engineering.... I work with gut microbes on the reg, and think this channel is beautiful.... but it feel like learning takes a back seat to random ramblings. There's SO SO SO much data about these microbes- their DNA- their structure- their communities- but yet Hank is talking about none of that. Anyways. Still love your work. Wish I could help.
Have you lined up a queue of people to see it, get that number up.
I need to go to bed Hank! Stop recommending me interesting things!!
WOW, congratulations @JamsGerms thanks for bringing us all with you on this journey
I've seen this before. I think it's called ink fish
I am amazed at how well James was able to follow that little guy on the slide!!
These guys are adorable. Well done, James, for finding a unicorn and for your paper as well.
Bro found a legendary micropokemon
Near the end of the 'supplementary material' video, where do you think the loyezae was going? It didn't have the wandering cadence of a podophrya or didinium on the hunt.
I love the James' conclusion, and - what an amazing episode!
That's pretty damn Cool.
Congratulations James! You have just made a big scientific contribution
❤movie ...edge of tomorrow...it's multi-tenacle aliens.... Alienated N.W.O.,.with corporate military...playing evil warlord games..❤😂😂😂😂😢😢😂😂😂😢😢😂😂😂😂😂😂😂❤
id really like to know why theyre so rare
Congratulations James on publishing your paper and on your unique findings! I look forward to hearing more about this micro organism and if the name change occurs due to your findings! Again congratulations!!
comments for the algorithm
Lil guy has no idea how special it is
Mama told me to never trust a microscope salesman
Now it has been seen 94,000 times by people around the world
It's around 139,480 people now
Love this show so much. Thank you so much for sharing this.
Congrats to James on his nearly unique spotting and the publishing of scientific paper. I hope peer review is kind.
GOOD FOR YOU JAMES !!!!!!!!!
The number 4 is pretty implied in this video