American Bald Eagle vs Chocolate Tube Slime
Haliaeetus leucocephalus compared with Stemonitis splendens
Taxonomic Classification
| Rank | American Bald Eagle | Chocolate Tube Slime |
|---|---|---|
| Kingdom | Animalia (hayvan) | Protozoa (protozoa) |
| Phylum | Chordata (Kordalılar) | Mycetozoa |
| Class | Aves (kuş) | Myxomycetes (Myxomycetes) |
| Order | Accipitriformes (Hawks & Eagles) | Stemonitidales |
| Family | Accipitridae (Hawks & Eagles) | Stemonitidaceae |
| Genus | Haliaeetus (Sea Eagles) | Stemonitis |
| Species | Haliaeetus leucocephalus | Stemonitis splendens |
Conservation Status
American Bald Eagle
NE — Not EvaluatedPopulation: ~316.7K
Trend: Increasing ↑
Chocolate Tube Slime
NE — Not EvaluatedPhysical Characteristics
| Attribute | American Bald Eagle | Chocolate Tube Slime |
|---|---|---|
| Diet | Carnivore | — |
| Average Lifespan | 28 years | — |
| Average Length | 90 cm | — |
| Average Weight | 5.0 kg | — |
Habitat & Geographic Range
American Bald Eagle
Found across multiple habitat types including tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests, tropical and subtropical dry broadleaf forests, and flooded grasslands and savannas, among 10 distinct biome types spanning the Neotropic and Palearctic realms. Populations are also found in montane and highland environments at higher elevations.
Widely distributed across Europe (8 countries), North America (United States), and South America (Ecuador).
Chocolate Tube Slime
Native to Asia and Europe and North America, inhabiting ecosystems characteristic of the region.
Widely distributed across Asia (Taiwan), Europe (5 countries), North America (United States), and South America (Brazil).
American Bald Eagle
The national bird of the United States and a symbol of American conservation success, bald eagles have a wingspan of up to 2.4 meters and inhabit forests and wetlands near open water across North America. Powerful aerial predators and scavengers, they specialize in fish but also take waterfowl and carrion. Nearly extinct by the 1960s due to DDT poisoning and hunting, the bald eagle recovered dramatically following pesticide bans and the Endangered Species Act.
Chocolate Tube Slime
The Chocolate Tube Slime Mold (Stemonitis splendens) is a species of myxomycete (plasmodial slime mold) in the family Stemonitidaceae, found worldwide in temperate and tropical regions wherever there is decaying wood, leaf litter, and moist conditions. Stemonitis species are characterised by their elegant, upright, tube-shaped sporangia arranged in dense clusters — the sporangia of S. splendens are typically 10–20 millimetres tall, chocolate-brown to rust-brown in colour, and supported on individual stalks (stipes) arising from a common base. The spore mass within each tube is supported by a fine internal network of threads called the capillitium. Despite resembling plants or fungi, slime molds are protists — during their vegetative phase they exist as a large, multinucleate, mobile plasmodium that engulfs bacteria and fungal spores as it moves through decaying organic material. The plasmodium aggregates and differentiates into fruiting bodies when conditions become unfavourable, releasing millions of wind-dispersed spores. Chocolate Tube Slime Mold is not evaluated by the IUCN; as a cosmopolitan protist, it does not meet criteria for conservation listings. It is a common and iconic subject for amateur naturalists and is frequently photographed on decomposing logs in temperate woodland. Its ecological role in decomposing wood and recycling nutrients is significant.
Shared Countries
Both species can be found in 5 countries:
Related Comparisons
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