Since protosteloid amoebae are microscopic one must bring their substrates, dead plant matter, into the laboratory to find them. Dead plant matter is placed on the
agar surface in a
petri plate and allowed to
incubate for several days to a week. Then the edges of the substrates are scanned with a
compound microscope and species are identified by their fruiting body
morphology and amoebal morphology. When protosteloid fruiting bodies are found they can be moved into laboratory
culture onto an appropriate food organism or mix of organisms. This is done by picking up fruiting bodies or spores with a
sterilised needle and moving them onto agar in a fresh petri plate that has been smeared with a bacterium or yeast upon which the protosteloid amoeba species has been known to grow. If the spores
germinate then the protostelid begins eating the food organism and a culture is established. ==See also==