Given your previous morg posting, I'm a little surprised that you are just now seeing these, Buddy. You'll see them everywhere now. To me these thin, bright, wrapping fibers, are second only to the "biofilm goo" in defining the Morgellons problem. Colored fibers, hexes, black/brown snakes, lesions, flakes, bug parts, and all other artifacts exuded from Morgies seem less important to me.
I've recorded the action of these guys in my hair and posted it on Youtube under screenname Morgthreader. The video quality is atrocious, but the patient observer will see independent pulsing movements and the twisting and wrapping that these use which makes it so hard to clear them from hair. The words "lasso" and "trapeze" come to mind for me. Their ability to "hang on for dear life" to hair is mind-blowing.
I'm a little confused with the word "sugar snakes" that keeps coming up. To me, these are distinct because they have the "stacked" construction that is like a chain of blocks. Is this the right idea?
Your observation of the motility of these thin, clear fibers is correct. Most don't move, most of the time. But when they do move they wrap and pulsate. I have only seen one stand completely up on end and move around like a dying snake, searching for life, for ten minutes. The fiber was set on a stereo receiver FWIW, so e-pollution could have been involved in this movement, but it seemed to "live and die" with the stereo just set on standby on.
Your image, (like the one's I tend to post), has crappy resolution. But nevertheless you can see that these fibers are reflecting much more light than everything else in the image. This always occurs, and it is why Clew complains of this challenge in his photography work. I suspect it is also probably why this guy, who is currently producing the best Morg images on the webz, finds an excuse to interject the term "fiber optic" in every other post. Clew knows- MORGELLONS GLOWS.
Compare the "infection bulb" from this link to "Mr. Potato Head":
http://www.biological-research.com/philip-jacobs%20BRIC/ar-olig.htm
http://www.biological-research.com/philip-jacobs%20BRIC/nemp/ar-olig2.gif