Abstract
Adaptive locomotion of living organisms contributes to their competitive
abilities and helps maintain their fitness in diverse environments. To
date, however, our understanding of searching behavior and its ultimate
cause remains poorly understood in ecology and biology. Here, we
investigate motion patterns of biofilm-inhabiting marine raphid diatom
Navicula arenaria var. rostellata in two-dimensional space. We report
that individual Navicula cells display a “circular run-and-reversal”
movement behavior at different concentrations of dissolved silicic acid
(dSi). We show that gliding motions of cells can be predicted accurately
with a universal Langevin model. Our experimental results are consistent
with an optimal foraging strategy and a maximized diffusivity of the
theoretical outcomes in which both circular-run and reversal behaviors
are important ingredients. Our theoretical results suggest that the
evolving movement behaviors of diatoms may be driven by optimization of
searching behavioral strategy, and predicted behavioral parameters
coincide with the experimental observations. These optimized movement
behaviors are an evolutionarily stable strategy to cope with
environmental complexity.