Difference between revisions of "Slime Mould"

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They are '''protists'''. <br>
 
They are '''protists'''. <br>
 
===What is a protist?===
 
===What is a protist?===
 +
A single cell eukaryote!<br>
 +
The problem of classification of protists is described in this [https://youtu.be/Ln69k7LyTsU?t=1m51s video].<br>
 
There are [http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/protista/slimemolds.html 3 groups] of organisms commonly called slime moulds, but they do not share a common ancestor ([https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clade a clade]).
 
There are [http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/protista/slimemolds.html 3 groups] of organisms commonly called slime moulds, but they do not share a common ancestor ([https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clade a clade]).
 
# Plasmodial slime molds = giant cells, single cells with thousands of nuclei fused flagellated cells
 
# Plasmodial slime molds = giant cells, single cells with thousands of nuclei fused flagellated cells

Revision as of 14:27, 8 June 2018

Fuligo septica grown on nutrient agar plate

Slime Moulds have gotten a lot of attention of their ability to find optimised transport maps, but what are they???

What is a Slime Mould?

First they are NOT fungi - although for a long time, they were thought to be fungi because their life cycle resemble each other.

They are protists.

What is a protist?

A single cell eukaryote!
The problem of classification of protists is described in this video.
There are 3 groups of organisms commonly called slime moulds, but they do not share a common ancestor (a clade).

  1. Plasmodial slime molds = giant cells, single cells with thousands of nuclei fused flagellated cells
  2. Cellular slime molds = mostly found as separate single-celled amoeboid protists, but can swarm with chemical signals
  3. Labyrinthulomycota, called slime moulds, but are not related to 1 and 2


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