Âé¶¹ÒùÔº

June 24, 2025

3D modeling method quantifies light-shading impact of freshwater microalgae

A 3D-rotational modeling approach used to estimate the light-blocking effect of microalgae. Rotation and tilting of a shape-realistic 3D model of Ceratium furcoides (Levander) Langhans in a virtual environment created using Blender, illustrating changes in projected area. (a) Schematic view of the model with rotation axes indicated (x-axis: blue, y-axis: red), (b) rotation around the x-axis, (c) tilting along the y-axis, (d) combined rotation and tilt, and (e) resulting projected area. The black silhouettes represent shadow projections for each transformation. Credit: Tibor Kisantal
× close
A 3D-rotational modeling approach used to estimate the light-blocking effect of microalgae. Rotation and tilting of a shape-realistic 3D model of Ceratium furcoides (Levander) Langhans in a virtual environment created using Blender, illustrating changes in projected area. (a) Schematic view of the model with rotation axes indicated (x-axis: blue, y-axis: red), (b) rotation around the x-axis, (c) tilting along the y-axis, (d) combined rotation and tilt, and (e) resulting projected area. The black silhouettes represent shadow projections for each transformation. Credit: Tibor Kisantal

Researchers from the HUN-REN Center for Ecological Research have developed a novel three-dimensional modeling method that accurately quantifies how microalgae affect underwater light conditions—one of the most critical factors in aquatic ecosystem health.

in Water Research, the study addresses a longstanding challenge in hydrobiology: measuring the projected area—the light-blocking surface—of diverse microalgae species, many of which form colonies or have intricate shapes. These projected areas determine how much light penetrates water columns, directly influencing photosynthesis, oxygen production, and in freshwater bodies.

"Algal blooms are not just about biomass," says the lead author, Dr. Gábor Borics. "The shape and structure of the algae matter just as much. Two species with the same volume can differ sixfold in how much light they block."

Using 3D models of 844 common freshwater microalgae—including cyanobacteria, diatoms, and —the team performed over 2,000 virtual simulations per organism to calculate how each species shades its environment under various orientations. The method, validated against analytical models for convex shapes, achieved a projection accuracy of over 95%.

Simultaneous rotation and tilting of the 3D-modeled freshwater dinoflagellate Ceratium furcoides demonstrates how complex orientations influence projected shading area. Credit: Tibor Kisantal

The result: the world's first comprehensive Projected Area Database for freshwater microalgae, now publicly .

Researchers and can now estimate how phytoplankton communities alter light regimes using a new metric called the Shading Factor (Fsh)—a potential game-changer in water quality assessment and ecosystem modeling.

Get free science updates with Science X Daily and Weekly Newsletters — to customize your preferences!

Importantly, the study reveals how different morphological adaptations—such as filament length, colony spacing, or spiral structures—can influence species' ecological success under varying light conditions. It also explains why simplified biomass metrics often fail to capture the true ecological impact of .

From cell shape to ecosystem function: Researchers developed a computational pipeline that combines 3D imaging, trait databases, and light simulation to quantify the projected shading area of microalgae—providing new insights into their role in aquatic light environments. Credit: Tibor Kisantal
× close
From cell shape to ecosystem function: Researchers developed a computational pipeline that combines 3D imaging, trait databases, and light simulation to quantify the projected shading area of microalgae—providing new insights into their role in aquatic light environments. Credit: Tibor Kisantal

"This is more than an academic advance," says co-author Dr. Gábor Várbíró. "We now have a tool that can reinterpret decades of phytoplankton monitoring data in terms of actual ecological function—not just numbers, but effects."

The research leverages the HUN-REN Cloud infrastructure, and it sets a new benchmark for trait-based aquatic ecology and provides a foundation for developing light-informed bioindicators for freshwater health.

More information: Gábor Borics et al, Projected area calculation for microalgae using three-dimensional models, Water Research (2025).

Journal information: Water Research

Provided by Hun-Ren Ökológiai Kutatóközpont

Load comments (0)

This article has been reviewed according to Science X's and . have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility:

fact-checked
peer-reviewed publication
proofread

Get Instant Summarized Text (GIST)

A new 3D modeling method quantifies the light-shading effects of 844 freshwater microalgae species by calculating their projected areas with over 95% accuracy. The resulting Projected Area Database and Shading Factor (Fsh) metric enable precise assessment of how phytoplankton morphology influences underwater light regimes, improving ecosystem modeling and water quality evaluation.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.