What is the biggest single-celled organism? - Murry Gans
 The elephant is a creature
 of epic proportions,
  and yet it owes its enormity to more
 than 1,000 trillion microscopic cells,
  and on the epically small end of things,
  there are likely millions 
 of unicellular species,
  yet there are very few we can see
 with the naked eye.
  Why is that?
  Why don't we get unicellular elephants,
  or blue whales,
  or brown bears?
  To find out, we have to peer into
 a cell's guts.
  This is where most 
 of the cell's functions occur,
  enclosed by a cellular membrane
  that acts as the doorway into 
 and out of the cell.
  Any resources the cell needs to consume,
  or waste products it needs to expel,
  first have to pass through this membrane.
  But there's a biological quirk 
 in this set up.
  A cell's surface and volume increase
 at different rates.
  Cells come in many shapes,
  but imagining them as cubes will make
 the math easy to calculate.
  A cube has six faces.
  These represent the cell membrane,
 and make up its surface area.
  A cube measuring one micrometer
 on each side,
  that's one millionth of a meter,
  would have a total surface area
 of six square micrometers.
  And its volume would be 
 one cubic micrometer.
  This would give us six units 
 of surface area
  for every single unit of volume,
  a six to one ratio.
  But things change dramatically
 if we make the cube ten times bigger,
  measuring ten micrometers on each side.
  This cell would have a surface area
 of 600 square micrometers
  and a volume of one thousand
 cubic micrometers,
  a ratio of only .6 to one.
  That's less than one unit of surface area
 to service each unit of volume.
  As the cube grows, its volume increases
 much faster than its surface area.
  The interior would overtake the membrane,
  leaving too little surface area for things
 to quickly move in and out of the cell.
  A huge cell would back up with waste
 and eventually die and disintegrate.
  There's another plus to having multitudes
 of smaller cells, too.
  It's hardly a tragedy if one gets 
 punctured, infected, or destroyed.
  Now, there are some 
 exceptionally large cells
  that have adapted to cheat the system,
  like the body's longest cell,
  a neuron that stretches from the base
 of the spine to the foot.
  To compensate for its length,
 it's really thin,
  just a few micrometers in diameter.
  Another example can be found
 in your small intestine,
  where structures called villi
 fold up into little fingers.
  Each villus is made of cells with highly
 folded membranes
  that have tiny bumps called microvilli
 to increase their surface area.
  But what about single-celled organisms?
  Caulerpa taxifolia, a green algae
 that can reach 30 centimeters long,
  is believed to be the largest 
 single-celled organism in the world
  thanks to its unique biological hacks.
  Its surface area is enhanced with
 a frond-like structure.
  It uses photosynthesis to assemble
 its own food molecules
  and it's coenocytic.
  That means it's a single cell
 with multiple nuclei,
  making it like a multicellular organism
 but without the divisions between cells.
  Yet even the biggest unicellular organisms
 have limits,
  and none grows nearly as large
 as the elephant, whale, or bear.
  But within every big creature
 are trillions of minuscule cells
  perfectly suited in all their tininess
  to keeping the Earth's giants 
 lumbering along.