Beadline

This microorganism is about five times larger than the Protosagania. Its diet consists of small cells, cellular residues and small organic molecules dissolved in the water. Innumerable cilia are distributed around of its equatorial region, allowing that it moves slowly. Its main characteristic is the presence of a long flagellum covered for a fine cellular membrane. All the molecular fragments not digested by the Beadline are imprisoned in small vesicles and these are loaded to the long one of the flagella, which is capable to use some of these composites due to the presence of enzymes in the interior of the vesicles. The enzymes break part of molecules and part of the produced energy is used to put the flagella into motion, making the Beadline swim faster. The residues of this second digestion are set free at the end of flagella.