- with oily,
resinous substances),
which can come into the
hymenium as
gloeocystidia. The
basidia are 25–40 μm long and 5–7 μm wide,
contain four spores...
- many (though not all)
members of the
agaric family Strophariaceae.
Gloeocystidia have an oily or
granular appearance under the microscope. Like gloeohyphae...
-
Latin word
butyrum ("butter"),
refers to the oil-containing
cells (
gloeocystidia) that are
characteristic of the genus.
Butyrea species are
poroid with...
- have an oily or
granular appearance under the microscope, are
known as
gloeocystidia. The
fungus was
described as new to
science in 1999 by
mycologists Maria...
- Exidiopsis, but are
distinguished microscopically by the
presence of
gloeocystidia and "myxarioid"
basidia (vertically
sepate with an
enucleate stalk cell)...
- family. Wu, S. H. (1996). "Two new
genera of
corticioid basidiomycetes with
gloeocystidia and
amyloid basidiospores". Mycologia. 87 (6): 886–90. v t e...
- a
combination of
smooth spores,
largely unbranched fruitbodies, and
gloeocystidia that
extend beyond the hymenium.
Molecular phylogenetic analysis confirms...
- have
clamp connections.
Characteristic cells with an oily
content (
gloeocystidia) are
found in the hymenium. In Russulaceae,
these show a
positive colour...
- present,
protruding into the
hymenium as club-like or sharp-pointed
gloeocystidia. The
hyphae of
basidiomycetous fungi are
partitioned by cross-walls...
-
smooth hymenop****,
hyphae without clamp-connections, both
metuloids and
gloeocystidia, and
spores that are both
rugose and amyloid. We are of the opinion...