The "Computers, Science & Technology" section is a bit light on the squishy, oozey bio-sciences. Let me alter that a bit by inroducing The Blob.
The Blob is a slime mold that goes by several names. In school they call it "Physarum," at home it is named The Dog Vomit Slime Mold. If you want to be nice, you could call it "Witches Butter."
When it is warm and damp out, you can capture your own, but, since it is December, I bought a scletata - a chunck of slime mold in suspended animation, attached to a bit of coffee filter. You can see the original scletata in the above photograph. This is what the sclerata looks like under my 'scope:
I put it in a damp petri dish and a few hours later it had already begun to slither about:
Pretty quickly it begins to fan out, hunting for food:
When it finds something to eat, the fans ooze back into the general mass of the slime mold, leaving optimized connections between multiple food sources and the main bulk of the slime mold:
Fun slime mold facts - slime molds have no brains, or even a central nervous system, yet they can figure out how to run mazes. They have no brains or nervous system because, even though the slime mold is larger than the American penny in the photo, the slime mold is one single large cell that can crawl around.
Normally, a cell has a single nucleus, but the slime mold is able to pull off the trick of being a huge single cell by having thousands of nuclei.
If I cut my slime mold apart, I wll have a bunch of genetically identical slime molds that can go off and live happily alone, but if the pieces ever meet again, they will fuse and become one single slime mold again.
Due to the way the slime mold fans out while hunting, then collapses into an optimized food transport network, slime molds can be used to map out the most efficient networks between cities by placing food on a plate in locations that correspond to cities on a map, usng light (slime molds avoid light) to represent barriers like lakes or mountains, and letting the slime mold do the work.
Crazy little slime mold!
The Blob is a slime mold that goes by several names. In school they call it "Physarum," at home it is named The Dog Vomit Slime Mold. If you want to be nice, you could call it "Witches Butter."
When it is warm and damp out, you can capture your own, but, since it is December, I bought a scletata - a chunck of slime mold in suspended animation, attached to a bit of coffee filter. You can see the original scletata in the above photograph. This is what the sclerata looks like under my 'scope:
I put it in a damp petri dish and a few hours later it had already begun to slither about:
Pretty quickly it begins to fan out, hunting for food:
When it finds something to eat, the fans ooze back into the general mass of the slime mold, leaving optimized connections between multiple food sources and the main bulk of the slime mold:
Fun slime mold facts - slime molds have no brains, or even a central nervous system, yet they can figure out how to run mazes. They have no brains or nervous system because, even though the slime mold is larger than the American penny in the photo, the slime mold is one single large cell that can crawl around.
Normally, a cell has a single nucleus, but the slime mold is able to pull off the trick of being a huge single cell by having thousands of nuclei.
If I cut my slime mold apart, I wll have a bunch of genetically identical slime molds that can go off and live happily alone, but if the pieces ever meet again, they will fuse and become one single slime mold again.
Due to the way the slime mold fans out while hunting, then collapses into an optimized food transport network, slime molds can be used to map out the most efficient networks between cities by placing food on a plate in locations that correspond to cities on a map, usng light (slime molds avoid light) to represent barriers like lakes or mountains, and letting the slime mold do the work.
Crazy little slime mold!
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