Slime Molds are what's called a plasmodium, meaning they're basically a sac of fluids with many separate nuclei. The move by committee, meaning each nuclei "chooses" which way to ooze the plasmodium itself, sometimes spliting up.
They do and yet they don't. They can grow which in that case they're moving but still staying in the same place. When the climate isn't good, they turn into a spore knob and they move into the knob. So that's what I have for that question.
Yes they do. A rather weird life-form that locomotes by ameboic outflow.
Yes. Many slime molds take on a amoeba-like structure and move with pseuopods.
Slime OOZE.
whipping their flagella
They move around with rollerblades
They dont.
non
Two broad groups of slime molds are recognized. The individual cells of cellular slime molds remain distinct-- separated by cell membranes-- during every phase of the mold's life cycle. Slime molds that pass through a stage in which their cells fuse to form large cells with many nuclei are called acellular slime molds.
The binomial nomenclature of slime mold is Physarum Polycephalum
mold can be helpful and harmful. it really de pends on wat u think
The Earth Star does pretty well at moving.
crawls
it can move like a slug.
Slime molds are plant like heterotrophs, which means that they are unable to move
slime mold
slime mold
The kingdom that slime mold is in is "Fungi'.
The scientific name of a slime mold is Dictyostelium discoideum.
acellular slime mold
they creep over logs ad they need to move.
orange slime mold is orange cream pops melting
It is not a good description. A slime mold is a protist.
Slime mold is not a ciliate. Although slime molds enter a amoeboid stage, they are not equipped with cilia.