Discover
/
Article

Watching nematodes swim the channel

DEC 01, 2014

For microbes, it’s not always open-water swimming. Sperm negotiate narrow reproductive tracts, infectious bacteria navigate thin layers of mucus, and many other microbes live life confined to thin biofilms. Now researchers led by Kari Dalnoki–Veress (McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada) have devised a way to probe how confinement affects a microswimmer’s stroke. The researchers capture undulating nematodes by the tail, one at a time, with a cantilevered micropipette. The forces the roundworms generate as they wriggle can then be determined with subnanonewton precision by measuring tiny deflections of the pipette. In one setup, the tethered worms swim near a glass plate; in another, they swim in the narrow channel between two plates. In both cases, the undulating motion lies in the plane parallel to the plates—that way, although the boundaries increase the viscous resistance that a worm feels, they don’t constrict its range of motion. In the experiments, the nematodes adapt by summoning super strength. They generate nearly three times as much propulsive and lateral force when they’re within a couple of body-widths of a surface as they do in unbounded fluid; in a channel a few body-widths wide, the increase is nearly 10-fold. The time-lapse reconstructions shown here further illustrate the boundaries’ influence. Each curve represents the worm’s configuration at a different stage of its stroke; the color gives the phase. Under confinement, the nematodes’ undulations decrease in amplitude and frequency, which suggests the nearby surfaces may be triggering a modulation from a swimming to a crawling gait. (R. D. Schulman et al., Phys. Fluids 26, 101902, 2014, doi:10.1063/1.4897651 .)

PTO.v67.i12.22_2.f1.jpg

Related content
/
Article
The finding that the Saturnian moon may host layers of icy slush instead of a global ocean could change how planetary scientists think about other icy moons as well.
/
Article
/
Article
After a foray into international health and social welfare, she returned to the physical sciences. She is currently at the Moore Foundation.
/
Article
Modeling the shapes of tree branches, neurons, and blood vessels is a thorny problem, but researchers have just discovered that much of the math has already been done.
This Content Appeared In
pt-cover_2014_12.jpeg

Volume 67, Number 12

Get PT in your inbox

pt_newsletter_card_blue.png
PT The Week in Physics

A collection of PT's content from the previous week delivered every Monday.

pt_newsletter_card_darkblue.png
PT New Issue Alert

Be notified about the new issue with links to highlights and the full TOC.

pt_newsletter_card_pink.png
PT Webinars & White Papers

The latest webinars, white papers and other informational resources.

By signing up you agree to allow AIP to send you email newsletters. You further agree to our privacy policy and terms of service.