: Because they never fuse their cell membranes, they are often used by scientists to study how single-celled life evolved the ability to cooperate and build multicellular organisms.

: These organisms are the ones that actually form a large, continuous "solid piece". During their feeding stage, they form a plasmodium —a giant, single-celled bag of cytoplasm containing millions of nuclei without any internal cell membranes dividing them. 🧬 Key Features of Acrasiomycetes

If you are studying Acrasiomycetes, these are the core biological characteristics that define them:

: They live independently in soil or decaying plant matter eating bacteria. They only come together into a visible structure as a survival mechanism to cast off spores.

: They exist as individual, independent amoebas. When food runs out, they swarm together to build a multicellular fruiting body called a sorocarp. Even when tightly packed together to move or build this structure, they remain separate cells with their own individual cell walls or membranes.