Summary[
edit] Description: English: A slime mould - Metatrichia floriformis [For details of the habitat, and of the climatic conditions which caused an abundance of slime mould species in this area, see
1493931, which shows a different species growing alongside this one on the same log. See
1528103 for a list of all five species found on the log.] These shiny little black spheres are just under a millimetre in width, and are the spore-producing bodies of the slime mould species Metatrichia floriformis. The shiny outer layer (the peridium) splits open in a way that suggests the petals of flower (hence the "floriformis", "flower-shaped"), although in a slightly more ragged fashion. The fluffy yellow mass inside consists of threads called elaters; see the link in the first paragraph for a description of their function. (A few days earlier, before the black spheres had formed, the slime mould appeared only as a dark reddish-brown smear on the wood, rather like a patch of oil.). Date: 11 September 2009. Source: From
geograph.org.uk. Author:
Lairich Rig. Attribution(
required by the license)Lairich Rig / A slime mould - Metatrichia floriformis /
CC BY-SA 2.0. Lairich Rig / A slime mould - Metatrichia floriformis. Camera location
55° 58′ 03.8″ N, 4° 34′ 18″ W View all coordinates using:
OpenStreetMap 55.967720; -4.571600. Object location
55° 58′ 03.8″ N, 4° 34′ 18″ W View all coordinates using:
OpenStreetMap 55.967720; -4.571600.