Instructional Video6:46
SciShow

Why Aliens Might Love Their Frozen Home

12th - Higher Ed
In the hunt for life beyond Earth, scientists shouldn't skip over frozen planets. In some cases, ice might actually help life evolve!
Instructional Video5:16
SciShow

How Can Microbes Protect Crops From Drought?

12th - Higher Ed
Solving food shortages caused by droughts is a big challenge that may benefit from a tiny ally. Turns out that the microbes living in the soil around plants can give them a boost when water's scarce, which means more food for us, which...
Instructional Video2:28
SciShow

Nature’s Secret Weapon Against Microbes: Squid Skin

12th - Higher Ed
There's a compound found in squid skin that they use to change color and protect their cells, but it could also help us fight some of the most common disease-causing microbes out there.
Instructional Video3:13
SciShow

These 100-Million-Year-Old Microbes Are Still Alive!

12th - Higher Ed
Researchers have found ancient communities of microbes that have been buried deep, for a hundred million years! This discovery might be the oldest living thing on Earth, and could even expand the search for life on other planets.
Instructional Video4:19
SciShow

The Climate Crisis Is Changing the Circle of Life

12th - Higher Ed
When you think about the impact of climate change on the circle of life, you likely picture polar bears or Bengal tigers struggling in new conditions. But the impacts on the world go all the way down to the tiniest creatures who do some...
Instructional Video4:29
SciShow

Hospitals are Hotspots for Antibiotic-resistant Germs

12th - Higher Ed
While antibiotics have saved millions of lives, misusing them can speed up how fast bacteria evolve to resist them. And it turns out that one of the biggest hotspots for these antibiotic-resistant bacteria…is hospitals.
Instructional Video10:59
SciShow

Engineering Plants That Fertilize Themselves to Save the World

12th - Higher Ed
Humans have relied on fertilizers to grow their plants for thousands of years. But the production of synthetic fertilizers also requires an immense amount of energy that comes primarily from fossil fuels and therefore contributes to...
Instructional Video4:22
SciShow

Pollinating With Bubbles and Some Other Good News You Might Have Missed

12th - Higher Ed
We've found a microbe that might someday protect us from malaria parasites, and bees might have help with their jobs soon, thanks to bubble pollination!
Instructional Video5:36
SciShow

Why These Moths Don't Run Away from Bats

12th - Higher Ed
Being attacked by a predator can be scary, but tiger moths have a very distinguished way to survive predatory bats. Meanwhile, scientists have presented findings on the importance of microbial ecosystems beneath the soil.
Instructional Video4:11
SciShow

Bioprecipitation: How Bacteria Makes Snow

12th - Higher Ed
Raindrops and snowflakes generally start to form around something else in the air, like a speck of dust, but sometimes that something else is bacteria.
Instructional Video2:32
SciShow

Nature’s Secret Weapon Against Microbes: Squid Skin

12th - Higher Ed
There's a compound found in squid skin that they use to change color and protect their cells, but it could also help us fight some of the most common disease-causing microbes out there.
Instructional Video5:00
SciShow

How Studying Bacteria Almost Kept Us From Discovering the Flu

12th - Higher Ed
Today we know pathogens -- viruses, bacteria, and certain other microbes -- are responsible for many diseases. But linking specific diseases to the microbes that cause them has been surprisingly tricky, and some research practices lead...
Instructional Video4:21
SciShow

Pollinating With Bubbles and Some Other Good News You Might Have Missed

12th - Higher Ed
We've found a microbe that might someday protect us from malaria parasites, and bees might have help with their jobs soon, thanks to bubble pollination!
Instructional Video6:07
SciShow

This Worm-y Critter Is (Probably) Our Oldest Ancestor | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Newly described wormlike fossils dating back over half a billion years might be our oldest ancestors, and researchers have mapped and visualized the physical structure of the microscopic communities growing on human tongues!
Instructional Video5:24
SciShow

How African Dust Feeds Florida's Crops

12th - Higher Ed
Massive amounts of dust manage to travel all the way across the ocean, creating some powerful and surprising global effects!
Instructional Video5:29
SciShow

Secrets of Life from A Giant Pool of Asphalt | Weird Places: Pitch Lake, Trinidad

12th - Higher Ed
Trinidad's Pitch Lake is a huge, oily, and filled with millions of tons of asphalt. It may not sound like a great place to live, but the lake is teeming with microscopic life! And learning more about these organisms could give us insight...
Instructional Video9:37
SciShow

4 Animals That Don’t Have Resident Gut Microbiomes

12th - Higher Ed
We humans couldn’t live without our gut microbes, but not all animals rely on microscopic digestive communities like we do. And understanding why these animals ditched their microbial partners can teach us a lot about the costs and...
Instructional Video2:56
MinuteEarth

Our Best View Of Bacteria Is...From Space?!

12th - Higher Ed
Observing the effects of microbes using satellites can give us all sorts of useful information about life on Earth ... and other planets too.
Instructional Video5:07
SciShow

An Unexpected Tool to Track Ancient Civilizations...Bacteria

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists have used a bacteria that commonly infects us to track how ancient humans spread to the Americas from Siberia. And other scientists have discovered a new species of hyrax in the forests of Africa by listening to their barks...
Instructional Video4:29
SciShow

Hospitals are Hotspots for Antibiotic-resistant Germs

12th - Higher Ed
While antibiotics have saved millions of lives, misusing them can speed up how fast bacteria evolve to resist them. And it turns out that one of the biggest hotspots for these antibiotic-resistant bacteria…is hospitals.
Instructional Video2:31
SciShow

How Close Are We to Cavity-Proof Teeth?

12th - Higher Ed
There’s nothing fun about getting a cavity! It can feel like there’s not much you can do to prevent them, but researchers are working on several ways to tackle their main cause so we can create a cavity-free world!
Instructional Video3:55
SciShow

Eyeball Licking: Please Don't

12th - Higher Ed
So you think eye licking (also known as worming) is just a harmless bit of foreplay? Think again.
Instructional Video5:55
SciShow

What to Do With All This Space Poo?

12th - Higher Ed
There are so many things we can do with poo! Waste is the enemy in matters of space exploration, but there are plenty of ways to use that waste to help make a mission successful.
Instructional Video4:22
SciShow

Animal-Free Animal Products With Cellular Agriculture

12th - Higher Ed
Many people are looking for ways to reduce their consumption of animal products. And these days, there are a ton of plant-based alternatives to help them do that. But many companies are working on ways to make animal-free animal products...