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Helminthosporium Helminthosporium oryzae on Oryza sativa Scientific classification Domain: Eukaryota Kingdom: Fungi Division: Ascomycota Class: Dothideomycetes Order: Pleosporales Family: Massarinaceae Genus: Helminthosporium Link Helminthosporium is a genus of fungi belonging to the family Massarinaceae. The genus has a cosmopolitan distribution. Species The following species are recognised ...
Collybia tuberosa grows on the decaying remains of other fungi or vegetation.. The type species for Collybia is C. tuberosa, a small white parasitic mushroom (with caps up to 1.5 cm (0.6 in)) which develops from a reddish-brown apple seed-shaped sclerotium in and on putrescent fungi or remaining in soil after complete decay of the host tissue.
Emoia jamur, the Jamur emo skink, is a species of lizard in the family Scincidae. It is found in Indonesia. [1] [2] References
Among the other members of zygomycetes, Apophysomyces elegans mostly resembles those from genus Absidia.However, its bell-shaped (although not conical) apophyses (outgrowth), the existence of its foot-cell like hyphal segment, rhizoids produced opposite to the sporangiophores upon cultivation on plain agar, the darker and thicker subapical segment, and inability to sporulate on routine culture ...
Trichophyton mentagrophytes is capable of mating. [13] This species is also able to undergo meiosis. [14] The haploid chromosome complement of T. mentagrophytes is four. The fusion of haploid nuclei preceding meiosis occurs in the penultimate cell of a typical crozier, an anatomical feature of the sexual phase of many fungi in the Division Ascomycota.
Seven novel diterpene molecules, microporenic acids A–G, were isolated from the cultures of an undescribed species of Microporus found in the Kakamega Forest of Kenya. These compounds have antimicrobial activity against several Gram-positive bacteria, and also inhibit the formation of biofilm by Staphylococcus aureus.
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The genus Dermocystidium was described in 1907. It was previously thought to be a genus of fungal parasites, related to the Thraustochytrida and Labyrinthulida (both those groups are now considered to be stramenopiles rather than fungi).