These tiny organisms matter. They have been used to map dark matter and improve transport networks, and they're living all around usA few years ago, I started looking at the underside of logs and it changed my life. I found a secret carnival of the most bodacious and interesting organisms I had ever seen. Bubbles of candy-pink gloss on stilts (Comatricha nigra), bunches of rainbow iridescence on toffee strings (Badhamia utricularis), bouffants of raspberry parfait (Arcyria denudata) - and those are just a few that have appeared on bits of wood in our urban garden.Slime moulds, or myxomycetes, spend part of their life cycle as what are known as fruiting bodies - which look a bit like tiny mushrooms, hence why they were once classified as fungi (they're actually in the kingdom Protista). Often you will find them, at this stage, in a colony - or, well, I'd suggest galaxy, sweetshop or funfair would be more accurate for a collective noun.Lucy Jones is the author of Matrescence, Losing Eden and The Nature Seed Continue reading...
Look at the underside of a log, and you'll find my new obsession: the beautiful, bonkers world of slime moulds | Lucy Jones
8. ledna 2025 11:16
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Celý článek: https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/jan/08/slime-mould-dark-matter-transport-networks
Zdroj: The Guardian