These tiny acrobats are on their way to the A Bugs Life circus.

By Noa Leach

Published: Wednesday, 21 June 2023 at 12:00 am


Ever wished you could just leap onto the nearest travelling object to cut down your journey time? Well, scientists have just discovered that a microscopic worm can use electric fields to leap onto moving creatures – and they caught it on film.

Much like hitchhiking for humans, this ability allows the worms to save energy and travel further.

“When you are very small, the world is a very different place,” entomologist and broadcaster Adam Hart, who was not involved in the study, told BBC Science Focus. “Caenorhabditis elegans is an incredibly well-studied creature and yet even with all that attention we can still find something new.”

The 1mm long C. elegans worms, which are commonly found in the soil, were found attempting to fling themselves from Petri dishes in the labs of Hiroshima University and Hokkaido University, Japan. So the scientists rubbed pollen on a bumblebee to build an electric charge and watched as the worms jumped aboard.

Published in the journal Current Biology, the study also found that worms can get on each others’ ‘shoulders’ in a single column, each worm lifting the one below. In this tiny conga line, as many as 80 worms can jump the electric field in one go. A conga line of 80 worms were caught jumping on a bee’s bum using an electrical field, as shown in this video.