Schistosomiasis parasite enhance transmission rates via interfacial swimming

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Schistosomiasis is a disease of poverty that affects over 240 million people worldwide despite an ecological paradox: cercariae larvae are short-lived (12 hours), sparse in the water body, and entrained by flows exceeding their swimming speeds - conditions that should limit host-finding. We resolve this paradox by demonstrating that cercariae utilize a physics-based strategy: they actively accumulate at the air-water interface, transforming inefficient three-dimensional search into effective two-dimensional exploration, increasing host-encounter efficiency by a thousand fold. Our biophysical models demonstrate that this behavior emerges from weight-asymmetric morphology, enabling an embodied algorithm for surface-seeking swimming modes without complex neural control. Surface-swimming cercariae benefit from near-zero vertical flows near the surface, allowing them to remain there while exploiting wind-driven currents for long-distance dispersal. We identify the air-water interface as a critical transmission micro-habitat, suggesting new physical intervention strategies targeting this interface to mitigate transmission of this highly infectious disease.

Article activity feed