Head Photo

Looping Network Meetings

#78 January 26, 2026

Monday 15:00 (Paris/Warsaw time)

Joseph M. Knight (University of Edinburgh)

Labyrinthula - An underwater microbial railway network

Abstract:
Labyrinthula species are protistan organisms found predominantly in coastal marine environments, notably as residents on seagrass leaves. A fascinating characteristic of this order, observed over a century ago but little studied since, is the ability for cells to secrete an extracellular ectoplasmic net. This allows colonies to form a spatial network of interconnected extracellular filaments across a substrate. Individual Labyrinthula cells are confined within these filaments and move independently about this network. The collective and interconnected behaviour amongst moving cells and the expanding network invites a physics-based description to this biological system. Here, we describe and contextualise the behaviour of growing colonies as spatial networks and probe their environmental dependence.

Recording

Head image credits (from top left):
(1) Corentin Bisot and Loreto Oyarte Galvez, (2) Claire Lagesse, (3) Stéphane Douady, (4) Stanisław Żukowski, (5) Przemysław Prusinkiewicz, (6) Andrea Perna, (7) John Shaw (Google Earth), (8) Justin Tauber, (9) Marc Durand.

Contact: s.zukowski [at] uw.edu.pl