by Jan
Thornhill
Dog Vomit
Slime. Pretzel Slime. Wolf’s Milk Slime. Insect Egg Slime. These are just a few
of the wacky names people have come up with to describe different species of
myxomycetes, a group of peculiar miniature “critters” commonly known as slime
molds.
A variety of slime mold fruiting bodies, including
Pretzel Slime (the snakey one) and Wolf’s Milk Slime (the pink cushions).
Photo credits: Laurence Acland, John Carl Jacobs, Jan
Thornhill
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Slime
molds make me happy – and not just because of their wacky names. They make me
happy because almost everything about them is odd. One of their oddities is
that they spend part of their lives behaving like animals and another part
acting like plants or fungi.
To see
slime molds, it helps to get down on your knees in the woods, especially beside
rotting logs in places were it’s damp and dimly lit. This is where many types
of slime mold begin their lives as a loose sack of liquid, a huge single-cell
with multiple nuclei. In this slimy form, called a “plasmodium,” the organism
oozes slowly over and under dead leaves like a mammoth amoeba, speeding along
at about a millimeter an hour. While it moves it feeds by engulfing and
digesting bacteria, fungal spores, and even other slime molds. What’s really
impressive is that this network of slippery muck behaves as if it has
intelligence. It makes choices, veering towards food as if it’s hunting. In the
lab, some slime molds are even able to figure out the shortest path to escape a
maze. Stranger still, if the plasmodium is chopped into bits, the separated
pieces will slowly migrate back together again!
When food
runs out, or the environment becomes too dry, slime molds search out a high
spot, such as a log, to do their plant-like trick of sprouting fruiting bodies
and releasing spores. This is the stage where they get fancy. The giant
plasmodial cell divides itself into innumerable single cells that then form the
fruiting bodies. In many species, some of these cells seem to sacrifice
themselves for the good of the others by creating a stalk that will hold the
spore-producing structures high enough to catch a breeze. When mature, the
structure bursts open and the powdery spores are carried away by wind or
passing animals.
In only 7 hours, the slimy yellow plasmodium of Insect
Egg Slime(Leocarpus fragilis) transforms itself into hard-shelled orange fruiting bodies. |
A small, mature Dog Vomit Slime (Fuligo septica) releasing its spores.
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Check out:
Artist
Heather Barnett’s video-taped experiments with slime molds:
Tons of
pictures of slime mold fruiting bodies at:
2 comments:
Awesome photos! slime molds are so alien... and very beautiful.
Natural weirdness -- love this stuff!
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