AI Article Synopsis

  • Plasmodial slime molds, a type of eukaryotic protist, feed on bacteria found in decaying wood and litter in forests, and were once thought to be primitive plants.
  • This study compares the movement of myxamoebae from three European slime mold species using agar plates with different bacterial preys, revealing significant differences in their mobility.
  • The three species were also distinguishable by their average cell size, contributing to our understanding of how these organisms interact with their environment based on substrate utilization.

Article Abstract

On decaying wood or litter in forests, plasmodial slime molds (myxomycetes) represent a large fraction of eukaryotic protists that feed on bacteria. In his seminal book Experimental Physiology of Plants (1865), Julius Sachs referred to the multinucleate plasmodium of myxomycetes, which were considered at that time as primitive plants (or fungi). Today it is well established that myxomycetes are members of the Amoebozoa (Protista). In this study we compare the mobility of myxamoebae of 3 European species, Lycogala epidendrum (order Liceales), Tubulifera arachnoidea, and Trichia decipiens (order Trichiales). Using agar plates, on which 3 separate bacterial species were cultivated as prey organisms (Methylobacterium mesophilicum, Escherichia coli, Agrobacterium tumefaciens), we document large differences in cell motility between the myxomycetes investigated. In addition, we show that the 3 species of myxamoebae can be distinguished based on their average cell size. These data shed light on the mode of co-occurrence via differential substrate utilization in these members of the Amoebozoa.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4883942PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15592324.2015.1074368DOI Listing

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