History and etymology
While working at the University of Wisconsin in 1979, Ann Worley, Kenneth Raper and Marianne Hohl discovered an organism that fit no recognized genus of the slime mold family Acrasiomycetes. Acrasiomycetes can be divided into two classes: Acrasidae and Dictyostelidae, based on morphological characteristic. However, ''F.alba'' did not truly fit into either of these subclasses but shared a few characteristics of both. Although ''F.alba'' shared characteristics of subclasses within Acrasiomycetes, Worley ''et al.'' (1979) were convinced that its best fit taxonomically would be in a new, undescribed family designated as ''Fonticulaceae'', which would then contain the genus ''Fonticula''. The new genus name ''Fonticula'' is a reference to the fruiting-body morphology: ''Fonti-'' from the Latin word ''Fons'' (''fountain'', "shape, form") and ''-cula'', from Latin diminutive ''culus'' (''little'', "size"). Opisthokonta is an exceptionally diverse eukaryotic group, containing shared ancestry between fungi, animals and even a few protists (Brown ''et al.'', 2009). In 2009 it was concluded that the genus ''Fonticula'' is part of the unranked group Opisthokonta. Brown ''et al.'' (2009) sequenced nuclear encoded genes of ''Fonticula alba'' for phylogenetic analysis and concluded that the genus was a sister group to the filose amoebae in the genus ''Nuclearia'' and that the ''Fonticula'' and ''Nuclearia'' clade are sister groups to fungi.Description
Morphology and anatomy
The morphological characteristics of genus ''Fonticula'' are unlike those seen in slime mold subgroups Acrasidae or Dictyostelidae. Several studies have found that in its vegetative state, myxamoebae of ''F. alba'' are generally small and irregular in form, ranging from 8-12 x 6-10 μm in size. The myxamoebae have finger-like projections deemed as filose pseudopodia, which extent at the posterior or lateral ends of the cell. Worley ''et al.'' (1979) found that the myxamoebae had a distinguishable ectoplasm and endoplasm. The clear ectoplasm is on the outer edges, while the inner endoplasm is more granular. Vacuoles are also found in numerous digestion stages in actively feeding ''F. abla''. These small vacuoles contain bacteria. In active feeding stages, there is a slime coat surrounding the myxamoeba to which bacteria sink onto. The ultrastructure of ''Fonticula'' also includes small contractile vacuoles, which are mainly deposited towards the posterior end of the cell. An ultrastructural feature that is shared between ''Fonticula'' and certain Acrasidae is mitochondria with discoid cristae. The golgi apparatus lends a helping hand in the fruiting stage in ''Fonticula'' as numerous dictyosomes are involved in the sorogenesis process. Cells in the genus are generally