Insect Dissection: How Insects Work
Dr James Logan and Brendan Dunphy carry out a complete insect dissection, using cutting-edge imaging technology to show the beauty and precision of the natural engineering inside.
Insects outnumber us by 200 million to one. They thrive in environments where humans wouldn't last minutes. We mostly perceive them as pests - yet without bugs, entire ecosystems would collapse, crops would disappear and waste would pile high.
The secret of their success? Their incredible alien anatomy.
To reveal this extraordinary hidden world, entomologists Dr James Logan and Brendan Dunphy carry out a complete insect dissection. Cutting-edge imaging technology shows us the beauty and precision of the natural engineering inside even the simplest insects.
Stripping back the layers, they uncover ingenious body systems and finely tuned senses - a bug body plan that is the hidden blueprint behind insects' 'global domination'. They also discover how science is now using the secrets of insect anatomy to inspire technology that could save human lives.
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Clips
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Preview - Insect Dissection: How Insects Work
Duration: 01:52
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Insect's Digestion
Duration: 00:54
Alien Nation Season
Insect Dissection is part of a special season of programmes supersizing the insect world. Discover the other programmes in the season below…
- - The secret, underground world of the ant colony is revealed.
- - Steve Backshall explores the world of insects and their close relatives.
- Â - Discover the ultimate evolutionary magic trick.
-  - Follow their 3,000 mile journey.
-  - Celebrating amateur naturalist & filmmaker Percy Smith.
- - A seamless combination of animation and real life.
- - Stefan Gates investigates.
Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | James Logan |
Presenter | Brendan Dunphy |
Producer | Nathan Budd |
Series Producer | Jacqueline Smith |
Executive Producer | Marcus Herbert |
Broadcasts
- Wed 20 Mar 2013 21:00
- Thu 21 Mar 2013 02:45
- Sun 24 Mar 2013 19:0091Èȱ¬ HD
- Wed 28 Aug 2013 00:00
- Mon 28 Apr 2014 23:35
- Wed 19 Aug 2015 00:00
- Mon 5 Dec 2016 20:00
- Tue 6 Dec 2016 02:50
- Thu 18 Jan 2018 00:00