Research Topic: chemotaxis

Movement of bacteria in the soil and the rhizosphere

Bacteria in soil move in many different ways to find food and avoid danger. Some swim using tiny whip-like flagella, others slide across surfaces, and many hitch rides on fungi or get transported by tiny predatory organisms. The ways bacteria move depend heavily on soil moisture, pore structure, and interactions with other microorganisms. This movement affects nutrient cycling and soil productivity, making it important for agriculture and ecosystem health.

Read More »

mSphere of Influence: Fungal behavior as a framework for the evolution of emergent traits

This paper discusses how simple fungi called chytrids are being used to understand how complex traits like vision and behavior evolve. Chytrid zoospores are tiny swimming cells that can sense their environment through light and chemical signals, allowing them to find suitable places to grow. By studying these fungi, scientists can test long-standing ideas about how complex systems evolve from simpler parts working together.

Read More »

Movement of bacteria in the soil and the rhizosphere

Bacteria in soil move around using several different strategies to find nutrients and colonize new areas. They can swim using whip-like flagella, hitchhike on fungal networks or other microbes, or get transported by predatory organisms like nematodes. These different movement mechanisms help bacteria spread through soil at varying speeds and distances, which affects how soil communities are structured and function.

Read More »
Scroll to Top