Viruses as prey? It’s just one of the surprising roles they play

Published January 23, 2023

5 min read

Though we often think of viruses as being harmful, only a small percentage of the millions of known species are pathogens. In fact, viruses are all around us, playing helpful and intricate roles in our bodies and the environment.

Now, new research shows that they can also serve as food for certain microbes.

In a study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, researchers report that a small single-celled microbe, a ciliate in the genus Halteria, can subsist and grow entirely by consuming a certain type of virus. Scientists estimate each of these individual microbes can eat up to a million viruses per day, and in a small pond in their native habitat of North America, they could probably eat hundreds of trillions.

Scientists knew that certain microbes can sometimes consume viruses, but it was thought to have minor importance nutritionally and otherwise, says John DeLong, study lead author and an evolutionary ecologist at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln. Viruses are packets of DNA or RNA that need hosts cells to reproduce, and which are thought to infect all living species.

“The sense was [eating viruses] doesn’t make much of a caloric difference since they are so small,” says DeLong. “But we think it’s happening all the time in nature at a very large scale.”

If microbes subsist on viruses, that significantly changes our understanding of how nutrients and elements like carbon move through the ecosystem, he says.

And if it happens on a large scale, as the scientists think, it means these substances may make their way up the food web much more efficiently than previously thought.

Viruses as prey

DeLong and colleagues study chloroviruses, which infect the symbiotic algae found within the cells of microbes such as paramecia. Chloroviruses thrive in many freshwater environments, with perhaps up to several million in every milliliter of water. These viruses gain access to the algae when other viruses infect and break open their hosts. (Learn more: There are more viruses than stars in the universe. Why do only some infect us?)

The sheer quantity of chloroviruses led DeLong to wonder: If there is so much of this virus, is it possible that anything might be consuming it?

To test that question, in the lab, DeLong and colleagues added purified chlorovirus to drops of water taken from a small pond near his lab in Nebraska. He wanted to see if there were any “volunteers” that might respond positively to the viruses’ introduction. And some of them did.

One of the most enthusiastic was a planktonic microbe, Halteria.

Next, he added viruses to a petri dish containing large amounts of the ciliate, and they grew quickly and reproduced, surviving only on the virus. The researchers added a dye to the viruses to ensure that viral particles were being digested by Halteria.

“It was shockingly fast to me,” DeLong says. “Those cells start to glow in five to 10 minutes.”

Delong suspects there are probably many other microbes that can consume viruses, such as other ciliates and flagellates. But it remains unknown how often this virus-eating, or virovory, happens in the real-world environment, in part because such microscopic interactions are difficult to observe in the wild. 

“It’s nice to have this example of viruses being a nutritious food,” says Kyle Edwards, a researcher who studies marine viruses at University of Hawaii at Manoa, who wasn’t involved in the paper.

“There have been some studies for a while now indicating that viruses can be consumed by unicellular organisms [occasionally], but I had not seen any study before showing that they could be a substrate for growth.” (Related: Powerful tools help scientists find a virus’s weak spot.)

Helpful invaders

Besides potentially serving as food to other microbes, viruses play several ecological roles that remain poorly understood.

Each species has viruses that can infect it. These can can spread widely within a population, curtailing the species’ numbers—especially among microbes.  This dynamic leads to boom-bust cycles of organisms, and helps to limit growth of phenomena such as algal blooms, which can be harmful to marine life, Edwards says. 

Viruses also help spur evolution by inserting new genetic material into their hosts. A total of eight percent of the entire human genome, for example, is made up of the ancient remains of viruses—known as human endogenous retroviruses—that infected our ancestors eons ago. (Learn more: How viruses shape our world.)

The most famous of these viral remnants is called syncytin. It encodes proteins that are necessary for many mammals, including humans, to become pregnant. Other genes taken from ancient viruses help ward off cancer; assist in embryonic development; and, ironically, fight infections.

A reshuffling of the food web?

The new study may also change our understanding of how carbon, nitrogen, and other nutrients move throughout the environment.

It’s thought that viruses infect microbes, then spill their insides into the environment, where bacteria eat them. This keeps many nutrients and resources mired at the bottom of the food web.

But if enough microbes eat viruses, this so-called viral shunt may be less important as a pathway than thought, DeLong says.

“We don’t know how much it’s happening in nature, but if it is, there’s another pathway that energy and nutrients are moving from bottom to the top… that could play a big role in carbon cycling and processing,” he says.  

This would significantly change our perception of the carbon cycle, he says, and have implications for how we understand the ecology of ponds and streams, certain intricacies of the climate system, and more.

Read More
Douglas Main

Latest

Oregon Sues Oklahoma Transfer Over Alleged Unpaid $10K NIL Contract Buyout

The University of Oregon says one of its former football players owes it $10,000, and the school is willing to go to court to get it. The school filed a lawsuit in Lane County Circuit Court last week against Dakoda Fields, a defensive back who spent two years with the Ducks before transferring to Oklahoma

Breaking Down Ole Miss’ Strengths, Weaknesses and One Thing It Needs to Beat LSU

The hottest location in college football this year brings LSU and Ole Miss together for a matchup that should be as close are expected. Both teams are rebuilt through the transfer portal and new coaching staffs, and this Sept. 19 matchup will be the first big test for either squad. So what gives Ole Miss

What are Indiana Football’s Biggest Trap Games of 2026?

Where will Indiana be ranked to start the 2026 college football season? While debate will rage regardless of the number next to Indiana's name to start the year, the Hoosiers will likely be favored in no fewer than 11 of their 12 regular season contests. That doesn't mean there won't be challenges along the way

Green steel startup Boston Metal is doubling down on critical metals

The startup Boston Metal has raised a $75 million funding round to produce critical metals, MIT Technology Review can exclusively report.   The company has been known largely for its efforts to clean up steel production, an industry that's responsible for about 8% of global greenhouse emissions today. With the additional money, the new focus could

Newsletter

Don't miss

Oregon Sues Oklahoma Transfer Over Alleged Unpaid $10K NIL Contract Buyout

The University of Oregon says one of its former football players owes it $10,000, and the school is willing to go to court to get it. The school filed a lawsuit in Lane County Circuit Court last week against Dakoda Fields, a defensive back who spent two years with the Ducks before transferring to Oklahoma

Breaking Down Ole Miss’ Strengths, Weaknesses and One Thing It Needs to Beat LSU

The hottest location in college football this year brings LSU and Ole Miss together for a matchup that should be as close are expected. Both teams are rebuilt through the transfer portal and new coaching staffs, and this Sept. 19 matchup will be the first big test for either squad. So what gives Ole Miss

What are Indiana Football’s Biggest Trap Games of 2026?

Where will Indiana be ranked to start the 2026 college football season? While debate will rage regardless of the number next to Indiana's name to start the year, the Hoosiers will likely be favored in no fewer than 11 of their 12 regular season contests. That doesn't mean there won't be challenges along the way

Green steel startup Boston Metal is doubling down on critical metals

The startup Boston Metal has raised a $75 million funding round to produce critical metals, MIT Technology Review can exclusively report.   The company has been known largely for its efforts to clean up steel production, an industry that's responsible for about 8% of global greenhouse emissions today. With the additional money, the new focus could

Embracer Follows Ubisoft In Splitting Off New Publisher To Handle Huge IP, Tomb Raider & LOTR Included

Say hello to Fellowship Entertainment by Ben Kerry 11 hours ago Embracer Group has today announced plans to create a secondary publishing label called Fellowship Entertainment, in order to "capture the full potential of the high-quality assets" that the group currently owns. The Swedish game publisher says that it hopes to spin off Fellowship Entertainment

Tesla’s Business Has Become Much More Diversified in Just the Past Five Years. Does That Make Its Stock a Better Buy Today?

Key Points Tesla's energy generation and storage segment generated 27% revenue growth last year. The company's non-automotive segments were able to help offset a double-digit decline in auto revenue in 2025. These 10 stocks could mint the next wave of millionaires › Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) is known for its electric vehicles (EVs), and while they

WD sees sustainability as key business driver in an ‘AI economy’

Hard drive company WD promoted long-term operations and sustainability executive Jackie Jung to become its first chief sustainability officer in February, as it steps up sales to companies building AI data centers. Her vision: Turn sustainability into a “brand” for WD, a strategy that reduces risk for the $6 billion company (formerly known as Western

5 Business Ideas Worth Starting in 2026

If there is one thing Nigerians understand well, it is how to spot opportunity inside hardship. In 2026, that mindset will matter more than ever. The economy is tough, competition is rising, and many people are looking for smarter ways to earn, build, and survive. But even in a difficult environment, some businesses still stand