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A bright yellow slimy blob is commonly seen in the summer on mulched flower SLIME MOLDS

A bright yellow slimy blob is commonly seen in the summer on mulched flower beds. SLIME MOLDS

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Page 1: A bright yellow slimy blob is commonly seen in the summer on mulched flower beds. SLIME MOLDS

A bright yellow slimy blob is commonly seen in the

summer on mulched flower beds.

SLIME MOLDS

Page 2: A bright yellow slimy blob is commonly seen in the summer on mulched flower beds. SLIME MOLDS

The yellow blob turns gray, becomes hard, then breaks down into a brown powder.

Page 3: A bright yellow slimy blob is commonly seen in the summer on mulched flower beds. SLIME MOLDS

People complain that the yellow blob looks like dog vomit and that the brown powder stains sidewalks.

What is this stuff?

Page 4: A bright yellow slimy blob is commonly seen in the summer on mulched flower beds. SLIME MOLDS

It’s a slime mold!

Page 5: A bright yellow slimy blob is commonly seen in the summer on mulched flower beds. SLIME MOLDS

The body of a slime mold is a single amoeba-like, multinucleated cell called a plasmodium.

Page 6: A bright yellow slimy blob is commonly seen in the summer on mulched flower beds. SLIME MOLDS

Decaying leaves, bacteria, protozoa, and wild yeast are engulfed by the a slime mold as it moves along the ground.

Page 7: A bright yellow slimy blob is commonly seen in the summer on mulched flower beds. SLIME MOLDS

After a heavy dew or evening fog, the plasmodium will slowly creep up onto the leaves of grass or low-growing shrubs as well as onto pine bark and other mulches.

Page 8: A bright yellow slimy blob is commonly seen in the summer on mulched flower beds. SLIME MOLDS

The plasmodium rapidly dries in the morning sun into a crust containing numerous fruiting bodies.

Page 9: A bright yellow slimy blob is commonly seen in the summer on mulched flower beds. SLIME MOLDS

Here are more slime mold fruiting bodies.

Page 10: A bright yellow slimy blob is commonly seen in the summer on mulched flower beds. SLIME MOLDS

Surviving spores absorb water, germinate and release a single motile swarm spore.

As the crust disintegrates, clouds of dust-like spores are dispersed by air currents, water, mowers, pets and foot traffic.

Page 11: A bright yellow slimy blob is commonly seen in the summer on mulched flower beds. SLIME MOLDS

Two spores then fuse to form an amoeba-like cell which gives rise to the multinucleated plasmodium and the whole cycle begins all over again.

Page 12: A bright yellow slimy blob is commonly seen in the summer on mulched flower beds. SLIME MOLDS
Page 13: A bright yellow slimy blob is commonly seen in the summer on mulched flower beds. SLIME MOLDS

Superorganism

It looks like a single being, but it’s a society of former individuals . . . The

slime mold!