Male and female gametes in acellular slime moulds fuse together to form?
Answers
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IN ACELLULAR SLIM MOULDS MALE AND FEMALE GAMETES FUSE TO FORM A NEW PLASMODIUM BY MITOSIS
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Slime moulds are catagorised in two distantly related families: “cellular” and “acellular”. Cellular slime moulds spend the majority of their life cycles as individual, single celled amoebas. Once they have exhausted the resources of their immediate environment the individual cells join together to form a slug which travels to fresh pastures before fruiting and dispersing spores. Acellular slime moulds have a “plasmodium” stage in their life cycles. Plasmodium is made up of millions of nuclei which share a single, gigantic cell without any membranes to separate them. Much of the research around slime moulds is focused on the acellular variety (usually Physarum polycephalum), as it is a much more unusual life form, with many unexpected properties. For the remainder of this research, the term slime mould is used to refer to acellular slime moulds