-
tasty ascocarps and
spread the
spores over a wide area.
Cleistothecia are
found mostly in
fungi that have
little room
available for
their ascocarps, for...
- of an
ascomycete is
known as an
ascocarp. Many
shapes and
morphologies are
found in both
basidiocarps and
ascocarps;
these features play an important...
- the
technical name for the cap, or cap-like part, of a
basidiocarp or
ascocarp (fungal
fruiting body) that
supports a spore-bearing surface, the hymenium...
-
ascomycete fungus in the
order Pezizales. The
bright orange, cup-shaped
ascocarps often resemble orange peels strewn on the ground,
giving this species...
-
Chester Ray Benjamin,
species in the
genus form soft,
cottony fruit bodies (
ascocarps) with cell
walls made of
tightly interwoven hyphae. The
fruit bodies are...
-
bodies (
ascocarps) are
cylindrical or
flattened with
dimensions of 3–8
centimetres (1+1⁄8–3+1⁄8 in) tall × 2–8 mm thick. The
erect ascocarps are often...
-
occasionally readily visible fruiting structure, the
ascocarp (also
called an ascoma).
Ascocarps come in a very
large variety of shapes: cup-shaped, club-shaped...
- the
spores to escape. Unitunicate-operculate asci only
occur in
those ascocarps which have apothecia, for
instance the morels. 'Unitunicate'
means 'single-walled'...
- formed, in
which karyogamy (nuclear fusion) occurs. Asci are
embedded in an
ascocarp, or
fruiting body.
Karyogamy in the asci is
followed immediately by meiosis...
-
members of
Saccharomycotina reproduce by
budding and they do not
produce ascocarps (fruiting bodies). The
subdivision includes a
single class: Saccharomycetes...