When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. 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 ...

  3. Basidiospore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basidiospore

    Agaricus bisporus basidiospores. A basidiospore is a reproductive spore produced by basidiomycete fungi, a grouping that includes mushrooms, shelf fungi, rusts, and smuts. ...

  4. Basidiomycota - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basidiomycota

    In the human pathogenic genus Cryptococcus, four nuclei following meiosis remain in the basidium, but continually divide mitotically, each nucleus migrating into synchronously forming nonballistic basidiospores that are then pushed upwards by another set forming below them, resulting in four parallel chains of dry "basidiospores". [citation needed]

  5. Basidiocarp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basidiocarp

    All basidiocarps serve as the structure on which the hymenium is produced. Basidia are found on the surface of the hymenium, and the basidia ultimately produce spores. In its simplest form, a basidiocarp consists of an undifferentiated fruiting structure with a hymenium on the surface; such a structure is characteristic of many simple jelly and club fungi.

  6. Monocyte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monocyte

    Monocytes are a type of leukocyte or white blood cell. They are the largest type of leukocyte in blood and can differentiate into macrophages and monocyte-derived ...

  7. 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).

  8. Sporocarp (fungus) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sporocarp_(fungus)

    Ascocarp of Sarcoscypha austriaca. The sporocarp (also known as fruiting body, fruit body or fruitbody) of fungi is a multicellular structure on which spore-producing structures, such as basidia or asci, are borne.

  9. Ceratobasidiaceae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ceratobasidiaceae

    The Ceratobasidiaceae are a family of fungi in the order Cantharellales.All species within the family have basidiocarps (fruit bodies) that are thin and effused. They have sometimes been included within the corticioid fungi or alternatively within the "heterobasidiomycetes".