"So we have one definition of immortality that depends on aging in multicellular organisms, but how does that apply to single-celled creatures that reproduce asexually? What does death mean to a single cell that divides and divides and divides, creating a legacy that is recursively itself. Is it enough to just be one of thousands (or tens of thousands) of clones to ensure that even if you die, you still, in essence, live?"
Journey to the Microcosmos- Do Microscopic Immortals Actually Exist?
Images Originally Captured by Jam’s Germs
Chlorella from a dying Hydra 400x, Paramecium conjugation 200x, Dying ciliate 400x, Paramecium 200x, Bacteria 400x, Euglenaria bloom 200















