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I have recently acquired a small petri dish of P. Polycephalum which I am absolutely intrigued by and cherish very much. As much as I want to see my horror movie monster grow, it is becoming a major problem. I am aware of the basic needs of caring for P. Polycephalum, such as constantly having to move it to a new, larger environment about once a week. So far I am managing to keep up with it's constant growth, but I am worried that I will run out of space or new enviroments for it to live in with it's rapid increase in size. So I ask you this question, is there any way to change a Physarum Polycephalum's growth rate? I do know that the use of a fan can slow down a P. Polycephalum colony while in plasmodial stage, but I am worried that it might go entirely dormant and create spores. If there are any alternatives, it would be great to know about them.
Thanks for any input!
- Parker
P.S., Are there any tricks on making a P. Polycephalum colony move or grow faster? Just incase I ever want to present it and demonstrate it's growth in a short period of time or want to quickly bring it back from a slower state.
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Hi Parker,
Could I help you to take care about your protected by offering it some more space in Paris France ?
I believe it could be very happy to visit Eiffel tower and send you photos from greatest places of French monuments... ;-)
If you insist to give him some tourism holydays, I'll be pleased to receive it in a 5 stars hotel as a VIP in embassy delegation from you.
This is my mail to plan travelling : f.groupes01@free.fr
Best regards,
FJD
It won't make spores without light and you can feed it lightly to reduce growth. The easiest option is just to cut off a section, discard the rest and move the section to fresh paper/agar
And give the rest a cool travel to Paris, France... ;-)
FJD
Hi Joseph,
As much as I want to send and share my slime mold with everyone I know and of course give it the vacation of a lifetime, I'm not sure if I can send it to Paris, France all that easily. I can imagine that certain importation and exportation laws may restrict me from doing so without a permit, and I just don't know if my Physarum could survive such a trip from here in America all the way to France.
Best regards, Parker
Well, that it was I have been doing, but I just feel so bad to get rid of it, because it's still alive and I also hate to waste or get rid of any of it. I have also been giving it to friends and fellow peers who may want it, but I am running out of takers and I also really have to force it on them to take it XD. But if that is your suggestion, I suppose it is the best option.
Thanks a lot!!!
- Parker
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