Slime mould, light micrograph


Light micrograph of fruiting bodies from the slime mould Physarum psittacinum. Some of the fruiting bodies are still closed while others have opened, revealing the spores (black). The spores will germinate into free-living, single-celled amoeba. The amoeba aggregate to form a plasmodium, a large single cell with multiple nuclei. The plasmodium can move slowly, feeding on bacteria, fungi and decaying matter. In poor conditions the plasmodium forms fruiting bodies and the life cycle begins again. Slime moulds were once classified as fungi but are now classified as protozoa. Specimen collected in the Northern Black Forest National Park, Germany. Magnification: x30 when printed at 15cm wide.


Size: 6400px × 4273px
Location:
Photo credit: © EYE OF SCIENCE/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: -, amoeba, biological, biology, black, body, forest, fruit, fruiting, light, lm, microbiological, microbiology, micrograph, microscopy, mold, mould, myxogastrea, myxogastria, myxomycetes, physarum, plasmodial, protist, protista, protozoa, protozoan, psittacinum, reproduction, reproductive, slime, soil, spore, spores