Badhamia utricularis plasmodium to sporangia at Strumpshaw Fen – Winter 2025/26
The downed trunk on which we have seen a number of wonderful slime mould displays – Badhamia utricularis sporangia and likely plasmodia, and Heterotrichia obvelata – continues to produce super slime mould activity.
21st December 2025
Every visit to the reserve we check out this trunk – the previous day there had been no signs of slime moulds, but today there was a curry-yellow plasmodium growing over, and presumedly consuming some Phlebia radiata [1] – this was likely a Badhamia utricularis plasmodium.

Strumpshaw Fen – 21st December 2025

Strumpshaw Fen – 21st December 2025
The plasmodium looks as if it’s sporulating, but this is due to it spreading over the highly textured, nodular morphology of the Phlebia radiate.

Strumpshaw Fen – 21st December 2025
22nd December 2025
The next day the plasmodium had spread leftwards consuming more Phlebia.

Strumpshaw Fen – 22nd December 2025

Strumpshaw Fen – 22nd December 2025
23rd December 2025
On the third day the plasmodium seemed somewhat diminished, almost as if it had taken what it could from Phlebia. But below it, on the bare wood, there was some plasmodial vein-like networking – the slime mould was searching for more food!

Strumpshaw Fen – 23rd December 2025
28th December 2025
Five days later a phaneroplasmodium (orange arrow) was fanning out to the right of where we saw the plasmodium five days earlier (green arrow), moving right and downwards towards a larger area of Phlebia (lavender arrow).

Strumpshaw Fen – 28th December 2025

Strumpshaw Fen – 28th December 2025
1st January 2026
Fours days later the plasmodium had reached the Phlebia moving rightwards across the fungus.

Strumpshaw Fen – 1st January 2026

Strumpshaw Fen – 1st January 2026
18th January 2026
We next visited the reserve nearly three weeks later and wow 🤯 – the plasmodium had engulfed large areas of the Phlebia leaving slimy digested fungus in it’s wake.

Strumpshaw Fen – 18th January 2026

Strumpshaw Fen – 18th January 2026

Strumpshaw Fen – 18th January 2026

Strumpshaw Fen – 18th January 2026
I can’t recall why we didn’t visit the reserve the next day – at this stage we would not have wanted to miss this plasmodium sporulate. The next visit a week later was wonderful…
25th January 2026
The Phlebia appeared to be mostly digested and in it’s place was one of the largest sporulations we had seen for some time.

Strumpshaw Fen – 25th January 2026
In the photo below, you can see a range of development from emerging primordia (the tiny blebs) to the elongated primordia with developing globular tips, which will eventually become the sporothecae.

Strumpshaw Fen – 25th January 2026

Strumpshaw Fen – 25th January 2026

Strumpshaw Fen – 25th January 2026

Strumpshaw Fen – 25th January 2026
The next photo shows elongated primordia beginning to cluster together.

Strumpshaw Fen – 25th January 2026
These clusters will eventually form the distinctive ‘bunches of grapes’ for which Badhamia utricularis is known, as you can see more clearly in the photo below.

Strumpshaw Fen – 25th January 2026

Strumpshaw Fen – 25th January 2026
26th January 2026
There was no debate – we had to come back the next day and we were not disappointed. The sporothecae had fully developed into cream, buff-yellow and orange-yellow globular clusters of globular sporothecae, hanging from a tangle of slender thread-like stalks.

Strumpshaw Fen – 26th January 2026

Strumpshaw Fen – 26th January 2026

Strumpshaw Fen – 26th January 2026

Strumpshaw Fen – 26th January 2026
Notice the speckled irridescence.

Strumpshaw Fen – 26th January 2026

Strumpshaw Fen – 26th January 2026
1st February 2026
Two days later the sporothecae had turned bluish-grey

Strumpshaw Fen – 1st February 2026

Strumpshaw Fen – 1st February 2026

Strumpshaw Fen – 1st February 2026

Strumpshaw Fen – 1st February 2026

Strumpshaw Fen – 1st February 2026
The sporothecae in the centre of the photo below appear to have a liquid coating making them glossy – almost black, with a droplet of deep-olive liquid hanging at the bottom.

Strumpshaw Fen – 1st February 2026
8th February 2026
Two days later the sporothecae were dehiscing.

I think this is the only time we’ve observed a slime mould’s life cycle from active plasmodium to sporulation, to young and mature sporangia, and to dehiscence – all in one place!
References:
[1] Bruce Ing – Tansley Review No. 62, The phytosociology of myxomycetes, New Phytologist – Page 187
Strumpshaw Fen is a nature reserve managed by the RSPB adjacent the River Yare, east of Norwich in Norfolk
RSPB Strumpshaw Fen webpage RSPB Strumpshaw Fen Wikipedia entry