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Published byPhillip Jennings Modified over 9 years ago
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DO NOW: DO YOUR BEST TO REMEMBER SOME BIOLOGY 1 MATERIAL. QUESTION: WHAT DO THE TERMS “HAPLOID” AND “DIPLOID” MEAN? WHICH ARE YOU? Slime Molds: Fungus-Like Protists
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Slime Molds: The Weirdest Protists Ever?
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“Dog Vomit” Slime Mold
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Slime Molds: What Are They? Slime molds are colonial, fungus-like protists. They are chemoheterotrophs, getting their energy by decomposing plant matter, such as mulch, or eating bacteria and yeast. They reproduce by making spores, like fungi do There are two types: cellular slime molds and plasmodial slime molds The plasmodial versions spend most of their lives as a macroscopic colony. The cellular versions spend most of their lives as single cells, coming together only to reproduce. To the video!
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Fruiting Bodies
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Fruiting Bodies are the spore-forming parts of slime molds
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More Fruiting Bodies
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Life Cycle: Cellular Slimes
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Plasmodial vs Cellular Plasmodial slimes (like dog vomit) spend most of their lives as a diploid colonial organism.
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Cellular Slimes Cellular slimes spend most of their lives as unicellular haploid protists. It’s when they aggregate that things get a little freaky…
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1 Giant Cell? Or thousands stuck together? Cellular slime mold colony (aka slug) This “cell” has thousands of nuclei (red dots), but only 1 membrane What has scientists so interested is: How can so many single cells coordinate to form one of these???
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Make Those Spores When an appropriate location is reached, the colony will begin turning the 1,000s of nuclei into spores… and the cycle continues Spore video
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So… What to Remember? Slime molds are fungus-like protists that reproduce via spores. Plasmodial slime molds live most of their lives as diploid colonial blobs made of many cells. Cellular slime molds live most of their lives as unicellular haploids, but come together to form a giant colony / cell with thousands of nuclei when stressed. Slime molds are studied for cellular communication and coordination… and because They’re just WEIRD!
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