• Shuffle
    Toggle On
    Toggle Off
  • Alphabetize
    Toggle On
    Toggle Off
  • Front First
    Toggle On
    Toggle Off
  • Both Sides
    Toggle On
    Toggle Off
  • Read
    Toggle On
    Toggle Off
Reading...
Front

Card Range To Study

through

image

Play button

image

Play button

image

Progress

1/4

Click to flip

Use LEFT and RIGHT arrow keys to navigate between flashcards;

Use UP and DOWN arrow keys to flip the card;

H to show hint;

A reads text to speech;

4 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
slimemolds
some call them lower fungi and some place them in their own subkingdom of fungi
acellular slime molds (Division Myxomycota)
create a slimy mass called a plasmodium, akin to a monstrous amoeba, that slithers slowly over moist areas in forests. The plasmodium may contain pigments, likely used as photoreceptors that give them a beautiful color. Acellular slime molds use phagocytosis to feed on bacteria, spores, and bits of decayed organic matter. The plasmodium is actually a cell-like organism containing many nuclei, which result from numerous mitotic divisions. Acellular slime molds spend their nonreproductive lives as creeping protoplasm that continues to grow (up to 50 gm) as long as there is food to eat. When times are tough, the plasmodium breaks up into globs of protoplasm. Each globule develops into a sporangium perched atop an elongated stalk. Then meiosis occurs and produces haploid spores. The spores go airborne until they land in a new, suitable site, where each will divide and, after several intermediate forms, becomes a new plasmodium.
Cellular slime molds (Division Acrasiomycota)
are not plasmodium; instead, as cells, they exist as free-living amoebas in damp environments. When conditions dry out, or when food becomes scarce, these slime molds emit a pheromone called cyclic AMP, or cAMP. The call of cAMP is irresistible and causes hordes of ameboid slime molds to congregate into a pile. It is then that truly bizarre things happen. Together, these once-independent cells form a primitive type of multicellular organism with specialized cells. In its first incarnation, this organism becomes a slug, actually moving around like a slug. Soon, a fruiting body, made up of some of its amoeboid components, is extruded by the slug. A few of these cells are then transformed into spores. A sexual cycle fuses two haploid spores, which can then develop into more cellular slime molds.
Both Divisions of slime molds share

A the production of the pheromone cAMP.
B the presence of many nuclei in the cytoplasm.
C a life stage during which they produce spores.
D a life stage during which they are multicellular.
The correct answer is C. Both types of slime mold reproduce with spores. Only cellular slime molds produce cAMP, so A is incorrect. Only acellular slime molds contain many nuclei, so B is not correct. Only cellular slime molds congregate to form a multicellular organism, so D is not correct.