Quanta Magazine: What Physical ‘Life Force’ Turns Biology’s Wheels?

Evolution created the flagellar motor, a combination propeller/brain that enables single-celled bacteria to move toward food sources. It’s an electric motor that rotates at several hundred revolutions per second — faster than the flywheel in a race car engine — to twirl a tail-like flagellum that pushes the cell along. When the flagellar motor rotates counterclockwise, it propels the cell through the water 10 or more times its own length in a second. The motor can also rotate clockwise, causing the cell to tumble about randomly. This amazing, self-assembling, signal-processing, direction-switching molecular machine is so powerful yet so spare that, billions of years later, it’s still used by bacteria in virtually every gut and puddle on Earth. Deeper DIVE.

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Inside Climate News: Rights of Nature Defender Wins Goldman Prize for Protecting Colombia’s Magdalena River From Fracking

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Digital Democracy: Legislation to Designate Santa Cruz Mountains as a "Resource of Statewide Significance"