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Slime Moulds


Slime moulds are a diverse group of organsims that are neither plants, animals nor fungi. They spend most of their life as microscopic single-celled amoeboid individuals in leaf litter, soil or decaying wood, and when conditions are right they reproduce and form a larger, spreading structure called a plasmodium, which in turn produces fruiting bodies (Secretive Slime Moulds: Myxomycetes of Australia By Steven L. Stephenson). 

For beginners, here is a “A Key to Common Genera of Slime Moulds” written and illustrated by Peta McDonald, a Melbourne primary school teacher: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f6/A_Key_to_Common_Genera_of_Slime_Moulds.pdf

A more technical key can be found in “Taxonomic Keys and Plates from The Myxomycetes”, a book by George W. Martin and Constantine J. Alexopoulos: https://www.myxotropic.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/MyxoKeys.pdf

For a photo gallery of slime moulds from around the world check out this one on a Spanish myxomycetes website: https://www.myxotropic.org/galeria/

Further information: 


Slime Moulds

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Discussion

Teresa wrote:
8 Feb 2025
Its very young and still forming, impossible to identify at this stage

Myxomycete-plasmodium(class)
Teresa wrote:
23 Jan 2025
@JaneR this species appear to be very common at this time of year, particularly after summer rains

Fuligo septica
JaneR wrote:
23 Jan 2025
I've had several of these in my garden, since October: always on Eucalyptus mulch

Fuligo septica
23 Jan 2025
Thanks Teresa

Fuligo septica
Teresa wrote:
22 Jan 2025
Great series Michael clearly showing varied colour sequences during maturation

Fuligo septica
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