Speaker: Tom Shimizu, Ph.D., AMOLF

Topic: Exploring the wave nature of life across scales - from active matter to ecology

Viewed at sufficiently large scales, the dynamics of any biological population in space and time can be meaningfully described both as particles - individual agents executing random walks in space - and as waves - migrating or expanding fronts of population density. This talk will explore the provocative proposition that confronting this 'biological wave-particle duality' head on provides a surprising and deep connection between three seemingly disparate fields: the physics of behavior, biological active matter, and ecology / evolutionary biology. 

 

I will motivate with specific examples the notion that the study of small organisms whose collective population-level migrations can be studied within the laboratory represents a rich arena for unearthing exciting new questions that cut across these fields.  What aspects of the underlying mechanistic dynamics - whether they be active matter processes controling microbial transport and locomotion, or neural networks that govern animal behavior - quantitatively define population waves of ecological consequence? Can an understanding of the evolutionary selection pressures on such collective phenotypes in turn drive deeper understanding of mechanistic design principles? Could building up a taxonomy of such population waves provide a new coarse-grained basis for understanding, predicting, and managing spatial ecology in real-world habitats?

 

My talk will attempt to place these questions in a concrete context by highlighting our recent work combining experiments and mathematical modeling to address mechanistic, functional, as well as ecological aspects of population migration waves in three contrasting model systems: the bactirum E. coli, the nematode C. elegans, and the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF).

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America/New_York
162 5th Avenue
7th Floor Classroom/7-Flatiron Institute