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~ a celebration of nature

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Tag Archives: cynobacterium

339/366 The Nostoc is thriving

04 Friday Dec 2020

Posted by sconzani in fungi

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Tags

cynobacterium, Nostoc

Rain may not be everyone’s favourite weather. It turns pathways to mud, may cause flooding in extreme weather events, and can make finding enough food difficult for many wild creatures, but one organism that positively thrives on the dampness is the cynobacterium Nostoc.

201204 nostoc (1)

Nostoc both fascinates and revolts me: fascinates because of its ability to survive in extreme conditions and its sinuous shapes, revolts because of its consistency and texture. I found this huge area of it on a walk along the coast a couple of days ago and just can’t resist sharing some photos. For more about Nostoc, see my blog Gloop, February 2018.

201204 nostoc (2)
201204 nostoc (3)
201204 nostoc (4)
201204 nostoc (5)
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Gloop

04 Sunday Feb 2018

Posted by sconzani in nature

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

cynobacterium, mare's eggs, Nostoc, Nostoc commune, star jelly, witch's butter, witch's jelly

When I first saw this gloop some time last year, I thought it was a type of fungus – the round cup-shaped bodies reminded me of various ascomycetes species – but my Glamorgan Fungus Group friends were quick to inform me otherwise.

180204 Nostoc (1)

This is, in fact, a cynobacterium called Nostoc, probably Nostoc commune, but I can’t be sure of that. It has a very descriptive set of common names: star jelly and witch’s jelly, witch’s butter and mare’s eggs. And, though I’m absolutely sure I wouldn’t want to eat any of this jelly, butter or eggs, Nostoc is considered a salad vegetable in the Philippines and, in China, is a food traditionally eaten at the Lunar New Year celebrations. To me, it looks like slime but with structure, and it feels quite revolting, slippery and scummy.

180204 Nostoc (5)
180204 Nostoc (2)

I’ve seen it three times now but it’s actually more common than my limited sightings suggest – it’s just that, when it’s dry, it can look just like muddy, dehydrated plant material, and it’s only when it’s rehydrated that it becomes more noticeable. And this ‘gloop’ is a survivor – it can endure extreme variations in climate, from the freezing temperatures of the Arctic to the dry heat of arid regions, and is even known to endure in areas where radiation levels are high.

180204 Nostoc (4)
180204 Nostoc (3)
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About me

sconzani

sconzani

I'm a writer and photographer; researcher and blogger; birder and nature lover; countryside rambler and city strider; volunteer and biodiversity recorder.

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