Last Sunday
I was very privileged to meet up with Bruce Ing the expert on slime moulds. In
an interview for the Radio Wales Country Focus programme (Sunday 6th
November 07:00), he explained that they were neither slimy nor moulds. During
the walk around Loggerheads Country Park, appropriately near Mold, Bruce found
several species and explained the lifecycle of these beautiful organisms.
Although they share similar characteristics to fungi they are very different
and in a class of their own.
Now is a
good time of year to see them as they emerge to spore – some are tiny and
difficult to spot although Brefeldia
maxima (they don’t have English or Welsh names) is quite easy. It’s the
largest of the species and has been seen at Loggerheads up to a square metre in
size looking like a bucket of cold porridge eventually turning to a pile of
black soot.
I was truly
amazed with the wondrous specimens, or pyramids of amoebas, we saw through a
hand lens and their bizarre lifecycle. For the sake of the interview I had to
ask the ‘so what’ question. Bruce was well rehearsed in his response,
with benefits for both agriculture and medicine, but I particularly liked its
potential for treating ulcerous conditions caused by a bacteria which can’t be
sorted by current anti-biotics. ‘Maybe we
can develop a slime mould that will eat the bacteria. It’s difficult to develop
immunity from something that’s eating you. The challenge will be making sure it
doesn’t go on to eat the patient.’
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