When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Basidiomycota - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basidiomycota

    Basidiomycota (/ b ə ˌ s ɪ d i. oʊ m aɪ ˈ k oʊ t ə /) [2] is one of two large divisions that, together with the Ascomycota, constitute the subkingdom Dikarya (often referred to as the "higher fungi") within the kingdom Fungi. Members are known as basidiomycetes. [3]

  3. Basidium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basidium

    A basidium usually bears four sexual spores called basidiospores. Occasionally the number may be two or even eight. Each reproductive spore is produced at the tip of a narrow prong or horn called a sterigma (pl. sterigmata), and is forcefully expelled at full growth. The word basidium literally means "little pedestal". This is the way the ...

  4. Basidiospore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basidiospore

    Basidiospores typically each contain one haploid nucleus that is the product of meiosis, and they are produced by specialized fungal cells called basidia. Typically, four basidiospores develop on appendages from each basidium, of which two are of one strain and the other two of its opposite strain. In gills under a cap of one common species ...

  5. Polypore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polypore

    They are a morphological group of basidiomycetes-like gilled mushrooms and hydnoid fungi, and not all polypores are closely related to each other. Polypores are also called bracket fungi or shelf fungi , and they characteristically produce woody, shelf- or bracket-shaped or occasionally circular fruiting bodies that are called conks . [ 1 ]

  6. Hymenium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hymenium

    The hymenium is the tissue layer on the hymenophore of a fungal fruiting body where the cells develop into basidia or asci, which produce spores.In some species all of the cells of the hymenium develop into basidia or asci, while in others some cells develop into sterile cells called cystidia (basidiomycetes) or paraphyses (ascomycetes).

  7. Puffball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puffball

    Puffballs belong to the division Basidiomycota and encompass several genera, including Calvatia, Calbovista and Lycoperdon. [1] The puffballs were previously treated as a taxonomic group called the Gasteromycetes or Gasteromycetidae, but they are now known to be a polyphyletic assemblage.

  8. Ascomycota - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ascomycota

    Familiar examples of sac fungi include morels, truffles, brewers' and bakers' yeast, dead man's fingers, and cup fungi. The fungal symbionts in the majority of lichens (loosely termed "ascolichens") such as Cladonia belong to the Ascomycota. Ascomycota is a monophyletic group (containing all of the descendants of a common ancestor).

  9. Microsporidia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsporidia

    As a consequence, the genomes of microsporidia are much smaller than those of other eukaryotes. Currently known microsporidial genomes are 2.5 to 11.6 Mb in size, encoding from 1,848 to 3,266 proteins which is in the same range as many bacteria. [27] Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) seems to have occurred many times in microsporidia.

  1. Related searches three examples of basidiomycetes are made of proteins called one day at a time sweet jesus

    basidiomycetesdiploid basidiomycete
    basidiomycota wikibasidium monocytes
    basidiomycota diploidbasidium fungi
    basidia microscopicwhat is basidium