Euglena Junction: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 11: | Line 11: | ||
<gallery> | <gallery> | ||
File:Mutual_of_Omaha's_Formerly_Wild_Kingdom.jpg|link=Mutual of Omaha's Formerly Wild Kingdom| | File:Mutual_of_Omaha's_Formerly_Wild_Kingdom.jpg|link=Mutual of Omaha's Formerly Wild Kingdom|'''''[[Mutual of Omaha's Formerly Wild Kingdom]]''''' is an American documentary television program that features formerly interesting wildlife and nature, now dull and boring or simply unavailable due to overhunting, overfishing, urban sprawl, desertification, and coastal land loss in the age of rising oceans. | ||
File:Euglena gracilis.jpg|link=Euglena (nonfiction)|2018: Model organism ''[[Euglena (nonfiction)|Euglena gracilis]]'' declared Micro-organism of the Day by the citizens of [[New Minneapolis, Canada]]. | File:Euglena gracilis.jpg|link=Euglena (nonfiction)|2018: Model organism ''[[Euglena (nonfiction)|Euglena gracilis]]'' declared Micro-organism of the Day by the citizens of [[New Minneapolis, Canada]]. |
Revision as of 11:56, 10 February 2022
Euglena Junction is a reality television program about the life of Euglena, a genus of single-celled flagellate protists.
It is loosely based on the television program Petticoat Junction, with different species of Euglena playing the roles of Kate Bradley, her three daughters Billie Jo, Bobbie Jo, and Betty Jo, and her uncle Joe Carson.
Sponsor
Gnomon Chronicles Micro-Television.
In the News
Mutual of Omaha's Formerly Wild Kingdom is an American documentary television program that features formerly interesting wildlife and nature, now dull and boring or simply unavailable due to overhunting, overfishing, urban sprawl, desertification, and coastal land loss in the age of rising oceans.
2018: Model organism Euglena gracilis declared Micro-organism of the Day by the citizens of New Minneapolis, Canada.
September 24, 1963: First episode of Petticoat Junction broadcast.
Fiction cross-reference
Nonfiction cross-reference
Euglena data
- Length ranges are 34-78 and width 5-24 micrometers
- Predators include: baby fish, water fleas, mussels, frogs, salamanders, and creek chub.
- Prey include: green algae, amoeba, paramecium, and rotifer.
External links
- Euglena @ Wikipedia.com
- Petticoat Junction @ Wikipedia.com
- Euglena @ Wikimedia Commons
- [1] @ Wikipedia