View allAll Photos Tagged slimer

This is actually called a Slimy Salamander. It is a very harmless and shy creature. Those big eyes are used for night hunting of insects. Often found under rocks, or under logs.

This caviar-like mushroom is not edible?.... at least not for 'Skull', he is very, very hungry .....

 

Looks like a immature Stemonitis slime mold.

Have a great day!

"Lil' cutie, mean with the slime green. Let me drip on you..." xoxo

Style Info & Photos

My wife noticed these tiny spheres on a dead fern frond as she was trimming dead growth in the garden. The frond is quite small, 2-3 mm across. I clamped it and shot it inside (there was a drawer pull in the background). I believe these are the sporangia, or clusters of spores, of a Myoxymycetes slime mold. Haven't seen anything like this before...interesting...

A rainy day with Photoshop for my album "Creativity, Close-up and macro". Take a look !

 

not a plant, not an animal and not a fungus

 

scrambled egg slime, flowers of tan or dog vomit slime mold

Gelbe Lohblüte oder Hexenbutter

[Fuligo septica]

 

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While hunting lilies I found I was being stalked! Lilies to be posted soon!

SOOC

Alligator mississippiensis, navigating a lovely restored wetland in an oxbow lake at Long Point Ranch, JB Harrison Foundation, Richmond, Texas.

Tech note: Super-Res 4-image stack--handheld burst, upsample, auto-align, median stack, crop to 16:9.

5 June 2021; 11:15 CDT; Velvia with post.

The two intrepid little snails show no fear as they successfully negotiate the crux pitch on their ascent of Beinn na Seilcheag.

 

For Macro Mondays theme 'Stone'. Two small lichen-encrusted stones were set up to form a 'crevice' in between them. My original idea had been to have the two snails looking at each other from opposite sides of the crevice (the Romeo and Juliet balcony scene came to mind), but the snail on the left wouldn't cooperate and wanted to climb across! The set-up was placed in front of a photo from a Highlands calendar that provides the sky.

 

No snails were harmed in the making of this photograph.

scrambled egg slime or flowers of tan

Gelbe Lohblüte oder Hexenbutter

[Fuligo septica]

 

stacked image composed of 33 single shots

software used: Helicon Focus 8

 

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If interested in more photographs of mine, please visit my website

www.natur-fotografie-kh.de

The name is self-explanatory.

Taken with Canon FD 50mm F3.5 Macro.

✧˖ °Violated✧˖ °

Emily Outfit ♡

Comes in 12 colors plus 5 bonus colors

Bag is included in the outfit.

Legacy-Reborn-Kupra- Peach

Located @ The Grand Event

Taxi:

maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/The%20Grand%20Event/28/118/48

 

✧˖ ° Taste ✧˖ °

Slimette Set Long Square (Shown on Legacy)

Fitted for Kupra Lara Legacy Reborn & Peach!

Taxi:

maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Beach%20Paradise/205/184/1989

 

✧˖ ° Wunshego ✧˖ °

Barbie Flips Hair

Genus/EVO X

Hairbase Included

Black & Tint

Demo Before You Buy!

Taxi:

maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/WUNSHEGO/120/47/23

Otherworldly Slime Mold

Coachwood Glen, Blue Mountains, Australia.

A large group of slime mold Stemonitis sp. Canon EOS 6D and 100mm macro.

Such Beauty & Wonder of our World that we still do not fully understand

Spent a wonderful afternoon with Kutub Uddin explore this fascinating world with amazing insight!

Arcyria ferruginea on pine

Was fascinated to see how this old slime mold had ended up looking like miniature cups! With an accompanying springtail!

Upton Magna - Shropshire

RAF Lakenheath, Suffolk, England

Slime mould found on a dead tree.

 

Slime mold or slime mould is an informal name given to several kinds of unrelated eukaryotic organisms that can live freely as single cells, but can aggregate together to form multicellular reproductive structures. Slime molds were formerly classified as fungi but are no longer considered part of that kingdom.

 

Eukaryotes are organisms whose cells have a nucleus enclosed within a nuclear envelope. Eukaryotes belong to the domain Eukaryota or Eukarya; their name comes from the Greek εὖ and κάρυον. The domain Eukaryota makes up one of the three domains of life; bacteria and archaea make up the other two domains.

 

Eukaryotes are thought to have evolved between about 1.7 billion and 1.9 billion years ago. The earliest known microfossils resembling eukaryotic organisms date to approximately 1.8 billion years ago.

  

www.britannica.com/science/life/Energy-carbon-and-electro...

New post and new face, enjoy! xoxo

Shots & Details💋

...::: New Blog Post:::..

pixelswaggersl.blogspot.com/2023/08/space-slime.html

 

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Back Drop from The Bearded Guy

  

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Shoes: Breathe Takoya

maybe Cribraria intricata

Christmas isn't Christmas without slime moulds. Well, maybe that isn't true, but here are some anyway. Odd things they are too. In the Kingdom Protista, they are more animal than plant or fungus. The plasmodium stage comprises one enormous cell, with multiple nuclei. it is mobile, hunting 'prey' items such as lichens. Some can move up to a metre a day. When fed & mature, the fruiting stage occurs. The experts in our group (very much not me!) believe that the first & second photos in this sequence are of the same organism in different stages. The third (balls on stalks) is a different organism.

Millichope Park, Shropshire.

Taken with Laowa 60mm F2.8 2:1 Macro / APS-C Sensor /Darktable.

Such Beauty & Wonder of our World that we still do not fully understand

Spent a wonderful afternoon with Kutub Uddin explore this fascinating world with amazing insight!

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