little cellies i drew :DD they're friends
(second oc owned by Mushyroomforests on TH, both designed by dollybonbon333 on TH)

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Maldives

seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Philippines

seen from Brazil

seen from United States

seen from United States
little cellies i drew :DD they're friends
(second oc owned by Mushyroomforests on TH, both designed by dollybonbon333 on TH)
I feel a buzz under my arm
I lift my arm and see two phones
I notice it was her phone buzzing
I say "oh that was a you buzz not a me buzz"
She replies "amoebas"
@nozomi-the-insufferable
Some tiny children. Sea puppies.
Fun from Dork No. 5
by Evan Dorkin
A Shelled Amoeba (Arcella vulgaris)
Family: Arcella Family (Arcellidae)
IUCN Conservation Status: Unassessed
The otherwise soft, squishy single-celled body of this common amoeba is enclosed in a concave brownish-yellow hemispherical shell known as a test, which is made up of chiton (the same material that forms the exoskeletons of insects) and protects it from both predators and adverse environmental conditions. Found in stagnant freshwater and damp soil throughout much of the world, a single hole in the shells of members of this species allows them to extend long, flexible "false feet" known as pseudopods out into their environment, which they use both to catch and ingest food (mainly algae and other smaller motile protists) and to drag themselves along surfaces, although when in water they are also capable of floating along by filling a bladder-like vacuole in their main cell body with gas. Like almost all single-celled organisms Arcella vulgaris reproduces asexually through binary fission (with a single adult cell dividing in two to produce "daughters". "Newborn" members of this species may initially lack shells, and if the shells of adults are too badly damaged they have been found to be capable of crawling out and surviving without protection for short periods as they grow a new one.
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Image Source: Here
Already included above, but a very cool little shell study: Here
Bálint Endre (1914-1986) - Amoebas. Oil, paper on wood, 24,5 x 49,5 cm.
“As big as planets, their monstrous pseudopods engulfed anything that strayed into their path.” (Mark Wheatley art, Amoeba Wars, Avalon Hill, 1981)
Victorian guy gasp when a lady bears ankle