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"Farming" Amoebas Discovered 49

Researchers from Rice University have found a type of amoeba that practices a sort of "primitive farming behavior." When their bacteria food become scarce, the Dictyostelium discoideum will group together and form a "fruiting body" that will disperse bacteria spores to a new area. From the article: "The behavior falls short of the kind of 'farming' that more advanced animals do; ants, for example, nurture a single fungus species that no longer exists in the wild. But the idea that an amoeba that spends much of its life as a single-celled organism could hold short of consuming a food supply before decamping is an astonishing one. More than just a snack for the journey of dispersal, the idea is that the bacteria that travel with the spores can 'seed' a new bacterial colony, and thus a food source in case the new locale should be lacking in bacteria." It's good to know that even a single celled creature is not immune to the pull of Farmville.

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"Farming" Amoebas Discovered

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  • Anyone think it is weird that this was found out at Rice University?
    • I think it's weird that they used Farmvile as a reference. Single brain-celled organisms have been playing Farmvile for over a year now, with no effect on anything. Other than wasting time, and posting updates to the uninterested. Try Harvest Moon instead, and keep it to yourselves. Rice is yummy though.

  • But (Score:4, Funny)

    by JustOK ( 667959 ) on Thursday January 20, 2011 @02:00PM (#34942804) Journal

    how do they make those little tractors?

  • "It's good to know that even a single celled [sic] creature is not immune to the pull of Farmville" I've been reading this site for years - never expected to see something that lame.
    • Guess you haven't been attentive enough :)

      • I didn't write that I hadn't seen some serious lameness (often in people's taglines) - but I think this is really one of the lamest of the lame. Then again, I generally don't read idle and comments that haven't been moderated up.
    • Amen to that. It actually made me feel a little sick to my stomach to read that. Slashdot shilling for Zynga == hurl

  • Not bacteria spores (Score:5, Informative)

    by Kilrah_il ( 1692978 ) on Thursday January 20, 2011 @02:05PM (#34942882)

    The article doesn't talk about bacteria spores, but spores of the amoeba that have bacteria inside of them. Most of these bacteria are from kinds that the amoeba "likes" to eat, so when they get to a new location, they have their "favorite" food with them. The bacteria multiply, and the amoeba feasts.
    Somehow, it doesn't work so well when I go abroad and try to take raw material for my favorite food (20oz T-Bone, FYI).
    You can get more info here [discovermagazine.com].

    • Thank you for pointing that out. Spores are most commonly a product of fungus growths. The wikipedia page on spores [wikipedia.org] begins with the statement that "Spores form part of the life cycles of many bacteria, plants, algae, fungi and some protozoans" but the reference for that goes to a 404'd pollenplus.com page--pollen is not really a spore but I imagine that, for the sake of argument, some people may try to cast it as such. Reading the remainder of the wikipedia page concentrates on fungi, rusts, smuts, and a

      • Actually, there are some spore-forming bacteria, most notobaly the Bacillus [wikipedia.org] and Clostridium [wikipedia.org] Genera. The references are from Wikipedia beause it's easiest to find, but I also remember it from my Med studies, so it's a confirmed fact. Clostridium's tendency to from spores is why regular alcohol cleaning of the hands isn't enough for people with Clostridium Difficile infection; you have to clean your hands with soap and water.

      • The wikipedia page on spores begins with the statement that "Spores form part of the life cycles of many bacteria, plants, algae, fungi and some protozoans"

        This is not wrong, but it's far from precise, or comprehensive.

        but the reference for that goes to a 404'd pollenplus.com page

        Hmm, can't say that I'm surprised. Doesn't sound like one of the shining lights of Wikipedia.

        I'm not a biologist ; I don't claim deep knowledge in this area. But many (possibly a majority) of the dozens of phyla of "protozoa" are

  • by opentunings ( 851734 ) on Thursday January 20, 2011 @02:13PM (#34942992)

    One in three can actually farm, since they travel with their bacteria.

    I guess that means that two in three are accepting agricultural subsidies instead of farming?

  • Farmville has nothing to do with this story. Why include that line?
  • by surzirra ( 1977164 ) on Thursday January 20, 2011 @03:41PM (#34944126)
    If my mom and aunt send me requests from AmoebaVille I will throw a fit.
  • If you look at it, it doesn't seem that weird to me. I mean, this is probably how the first multiple cell creatures came into existence, simply by working together!
    • Yes, long been known that slime molds display colonial behaviour, and that that genus has a motile "slug" colony form when it has exhausting the local food supply (really creepy to see a "plant-like" thing congeal into an "animal-like" thing). The new discovery is the fact that a significant amount of dictyo colonies carry food bacteria along with their spores, to grow wherever they land. They likely haven't outcompeted the non farming strains due to the trade-off (i.e, non farming strains do better in bact

  • My amoebas just applied for farm subsidies.
  • I misread it as "Farting" Amoebas :)
  • Discovered? This behavior was discussed in great depth in my sophomore cell bio text 30 years ago.

    That course inspired me to get a degree in molecular bio, and I've posted about this behavior often, here and elsewhere. It's remarkable and inspiring in many ways, but any reference to farming -- or sudden surprise that a microbial organism is capable of doing anything but grazing to death is ... sad and ill-informed

"The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, but wiser people so full of doubts." -- Bertrand Russell

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