Slime Moulds
Jonathan Chubb, Merlin Sheldrake and Elinor Thompson explore slime moulds, the brainless organisms that can find their way around a maze.
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss slime mould, a basic organism that grows on logs, cowpats and compost heaps. Scientists have found difficult to categorise slime mould: in 1868, the biologist Thomas Huxley asked: ‘Is this a plant, or is it an animal? Is it both or is it neither?’ and there is a great deal scientists still don’t know about it.
But despite not having a brain, slime mould can solve complex problems: it can find the most efficient way round a maze and has been used to map Tokyo’s rail network. Researchers are using it to help find treatments for cancer, Parkinson's and Alzheimer's disease, and computer scientists have designed an algorithm based on slime mould behaviour to learn about dark matter. It’s even been sent to the international space station to help study the effects of weightlessness.
With
Jonathan Chubb
Professor of Quantitative Cell Biology at University College, London
Elinor Thompson
Reader in microbiology and plant science at the University of Greenwich
And
Merlin Sheldrake
Biologist and writer
Producer: Eliane Glaser
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Contributors:
of University College, London
of Vrije University Amsterdam and the University of Oxford
of the University of GreenwichRelated links:
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