Thomas August Kiørboe

Thomas Kiørboe

Professor

DTU AQUA
National Institute of Aquatic Resources

Centre for Ocean Life

Technical University of Denmark

Henrik Dams Allé

Building 202, room 4133

2800 Kgs. Lyngby

Home page

Request a vCard via e-mail.

LoadingText

News from DTU

2024
A barnacle creates a feeding current. Picture from high-speed video by Kristian Maar.
26 MAR

PhD defence on the fluid mechanics of barnacle feeding

On 5 April 2024, Kristian Maar will defend his PhD thesis. The defence can be followed online or attended in person at DTU Lyngby Campus.

2023
Ocean Life, DTU Aqua
13 DEC

The broad outlines of ocean research – Center for Ocean Life enters its 12th and final year

From bacteria to whales, this is how the Villum Center for Ocean Life itself describes their range within the scientific approach they launched with the center in 2012. In 2024 it ends. We drawa portrait of the marine research centre, which has focused its attention on the big lines instead of the individual species when looking at life...

18 JUL

Predation in a microbial world

The swimming sperm cell reminds us of our aquatic ancestors: the flagellates. While the sperm cell uses its flagellum solely for propulsion, flagellates use their flagellum also for foraging, making them the most important predators on bacteria and picophytoplankton in the ocean. A new review explores the fluid mechanics of predation...

14 FEB

Fast food: efficient prey handling in suspension feeding copepods

Copepods are among the most common multicellular organisms on earth and feed on a wide variety of prey. When capturing food, they have to briefly handle it before they can ingest it. However, not much is known about how the handling time impact copepod feeding efficiency.

Trait-based Approaches to Ocean Life - 6th International Workshop: Copenhagen, 15-17 August 2023
12 JAN

Trait-based Approaches to Ocean Life - 6th International Workshop: Copenhagen, 15-17 August 2023

Ecosystems are complex machineries, and our ability to predict how multiple drivers and environmental forcing structure communities are limited. One way to represent and understand organisms, communities and ecosystems is to think in terms of 'traits' rather than species, and how the dominant traits emerge in an evolutionary and ecological...

2022
25 OCT

Using Ultrasound to Tether Microorganisms

Swimming microorganisms move as they please, and it requires patience to observe their appendage motions, swimming kinematics, and the resulting flows. In a new paper in the Journal of Experimental Biology, we show how to use ultrasound to acoustically tether and enable behavioral observations of individual microorganisms with simple...

26 SEP

Grazer-induced aggregation in diatoms

Diatoms are one of the most diverse groups of phytoplankton in the ocean. One reason for this high diversity is the evolution of multiple defence mechanisms and subsequent evolution of grazer “counter measures”. In a new study, we describe the discovery of yet another defence mechanism: when exposed to chemical cues from copepods several...

07 SEP

The feeding behavior of Apocyclops royi

Ambush-feeding copepods passively wait for its prey and capture them by a fast surprise attack. The copepods sense the hydromechanical signals generated by their motile prey. However, the ambush feeding copepod Apocyclops royi can be sustained on a diet of Baker’s yeast, which are small, non-motile cells. We asked how this ambush-feeding...

14 JUL

Hairy flagellates have a clever way to overcome limitations of life at small scales

Flagellates live in a small-scale environment where viscosity impedes contact with their bacterial prey. Most flagellates use the active waving motion of a flexible flagellum with hairs to generate a feeding current. The presence of hairs significantly increases the force generated by the flagellum and also reverses its direction, hence...

22 JUN

Evolution of toxicity as a public good in phytoplankton

Many species of phytoplankton release toxins that combat competitors and predators. It has long puzzled researchers how such ‘public good’ toxicity has evolved, because mutant ‘cheaters’ that do not pay the cost of toxin production would benefit equally from the toxicity and thus outcompete the toxin producers. In a new study we describe...

05 MAY

Exploring the relation between the size spectrum of plankton communities and carbon export in the ocean

In the oceans, a nearly constant biomass of organisms is found in equal log- intervals of body-size. This large-scale regularity is referred to as the size spectrum. In this new modelling study, we find that parameters of the size spectrum correlate strongly with the export and export efficiency of particles into the deep ocean. These...

Mechanisms and fluid dynamics of foraging in heterotrophic nanoflagellates
29 APR

How do flagellates feed: Mystery solved

Despite living in a micro-scale world governed by viscosity, heterotrophic nanoflagellates are able to clear great volumes of water for prey by creating feeding flows with their flagellum. A new study from the Centre describes how flagellates with different feeding strategies overcome the impeding effect of viscosity, and provides a mechanistic...

22 APR

Flow through a bare sponge skeleton is not informative about how flow moves through live sponges

The deep-sea glass sponge Euplectella aspergillum is well known due to its beautiful lattice-work structure, and has attracted interest in its solid and fluid mechanical properties. In a recent paper, we argue that including sponge tissue is key in understanding the hydrodynamics of these beautiful animals, and an analysis of their hydrodynamics...

13 APR

Costs and benefits of predator-induced defense in a toxic diatom

The bloom-forming diatom Pseudo-nitzschia produces a potent neurotoxin, domoic acid, that may cause closure of fisheries. The reason for its production has long been under debate. In a new study (in collaboration with the Natural History Museum of Denmark) we demonstrate a ‘private-good’ benefit to producing the toxins as toxic cells...

08 APR

Predator field and colony morphology determine the defensive benefit of colony formation in marine phytoplankton

In a new paper, Ocean Life researchers use direct observations of predator-prey interactions to study the defensive benefit of colony formation in four species of phytoplankton.

01 APR

The seascape of fear and the biological carbon pump

Organisms adapt to predation risk by changing their behavior. A new study from the Centre for Ocean Life demonstrates how defensive behaviors of marine pelagic organisms, from phytoplankton to fish, may significantly change the intensity of the biological carbon pump and, hence the ability of the ocean to sequester carbon.

Illustrations of diatoms, copepods, copepod cues, and thick-shelled diatoms
17 FEB

Thick shells reduce copepod grazing on diatoms

The diatom frustule has been shown to provide protection against grazing copepods, but the mechanisms behind the defense is unknown. In a new paper published in Limnology and Oceanography Letters, we directly observe copepod-diatom interactions and provide a mechanistic understanding of the defense: not only are diatoms with thicker shells...

08 FEB

Feeding flow and membranelle filtration in ciliates

The feeding on suspended food particles in ciliates is complex and relies typically on coordinated motion in bands of transversal rows of cilia known as membranelles. A new paper in Physical Review Fluids explores and models the fluid dynamics of feeding flow and particle retention in ciliates that use a single membranelle band to both...