Product Details
Myxomycetes: A Handbook of Slime Molds

Myxomycetes: A Handbook of Slime Molds
By Henry Stempen, Steven L. Stephenson

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Product Description

This book identifies all the species one is likely to encounter, with extensive information on their structural features, distribution, and ecological associations. Superbly illustrated, including keys, it is an introduction to their biology as well as a field guide.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #301962 in Books
  • Published on: 2000-01-04
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 200 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
Excellent book that will undoubtedly increase awareness and appreciation of myxomycetes. I recommend it highly. (D.S.H., Mycotaxon, April-June 1995 )

The aim of this book is to introduce slime moulds to the public and this it does admirably. (A. Feest, New Phytol, Vol 132 1996 )

This handbook should certainly stimulate interest and study of the myxomycetes. (Vernon Ahmadjian, The Bryologist, Vol 98 1995 )

This handbook goes a long way toward revealing the otherworldly beauty of the myxomycetes. (HortIdeas, March 2000 )

Profusely illustrated . . . Most readable. (Plant Talk, April 2000 )

A. Feest, New Phytol, Vol 132 1996
The aim of this book is to introduce slime moulds to the public and this it does admirably.

Vernon Ahmadjian, The Bryologist, Vol 98 1995
This handbook should certainly stimulate interest and study of the myxomycetes.


Customer Reviews

As Strange as Any Life from Mars Could be!5
The slime molds are generally little noticed, but very strange life forms that could easily fit in a science fiction book. The swarm cells and myxamoebae unite to form first an amoeboid zygote, then the strange, crawling, plasmodium stage, and finally the fungus-like fruiting body. The plasmodia can be (in the case of Fuligo) large yellow pulsating crawling blobs that suddenly appear on people's lawns. Others are less noticeable, but often brightly colored. I have seen one of these plasmodia in my life- a bright pink blob that disappeared into the ground when I raised a rotting log in the Pinaleno Mountains of Arizona. I was certainly startled!

Stephenson and Stempen have written an excellent book on these strange critters in "Myxomycetes: A Handbook of Slime Molds." It fills a gap in the literature on natural history. It is my hope that more people will be able to appreciate these neat organisms through the descriptions, excellent line drawings and well-rendered color plates.

I will disagree with one reviewer's dislike of the describer's name after the scientific name, however. It is there for the convenience of other taxonomist as least as much as the vanity of the describer. If I know that Physarum nutans was described by Persoon it tells me something about where I should look for the original description and may also give me some idea of when the name probably originated. Also Physarum cinereum (Batsch) Persoon tells me that Batsch wrote the original description, but placed the species in a different genus, which was than changed to the present genus by Persoon. Thus such "vain" additions are often important to other workers in the field.

I do agree with the same reviewer that some further discussion of how slime molds are classified might have helped an otherwise excellent book. However, I am also fully aware that the classification is still in flux and no final answers may yet be possible until DNA studies are done (and maybe not even then!).

Read this book if you find the weirdness of the world fascinating! Better still, use it to find and identify slime molds. Good hunting.