'Loch ness monster' microbe stretches its neck to 30 times its body length in seconds

A microbe can grow a neck that is 30 times as long as its body in just a few seconds. Origami folding explains how

A grainy black and white photo of an alleged loch ness monster sighting
A modern reconstruction of the famous Loch Ness Monster hoax photo from 1934.
(Image credit: Matt84 via Getty Images)

The single-celled organism Lacrymaria olor uses one of the most curious hunting techniques of all. Its oval-shaped body measures around 40 micrometers and has a small protrusion at the end. When it detects food, it stretches this “neck” out to around 30 times its own body length within seconds in order to grab prey that is far away, an action that makes it look like the Loch Ness monster. But how L. olor manages to do this without enormous tensile forces tearing its cell membrane has so far been a complete mystery. Experts suspect that the organism must store the extra length of this feeding apparatus somewhere to be able to retrieve it so quickly.

A microscope image of Lacrymaria olor

The long neck of Lacrymaria olor—the Loch Ness microbe—holds several biomechanical secrets.

(Image credit: Picturepest/Flickr (CC BY 2.0))
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Lars Fischer is a chemist and works as a journalist and editor at Spektrum der Wissenschaft.