Definition of Ixocutis. Meaning of Ixocutis. Synonyms of Ixocutis

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Ixocutis. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Ixocutis and, of course, Ixocutis synonyms and on the right images related to the word Ixocutis.

Definition of Ixocutis

No result for Ixocutis. Showing similar results...

Meaning of Ixocutis from wikipedia

- morphologically separating the different species of the genus. The pileipellis is an ixocutis composed of parallel hyphae embedded in a gelatinous matrix. The stipitipellis...
- yellowish to yellowish brown, thick walled (0.5–1 μm). Pileipellis an ixocutis, (9–) 12–54 μm wide, hyphae 1.5–4 (–5.5) μm diameter, hyaline and thin-walled...
- ends) with a sharp tip, and measure 25–30 by 6–9 μm. The cap cuticle (an ixocutis) is made of a layer of roughly horizontal, gelatinized, wavy, hyaline hyphae...
- tissue layer called an ixocutis—a gelatinized layer of hyphae lying parallel to the cap surface. The hyphae comprising the ixocutis are cylindrical, hyaline...
- they completely cover the gill edge. The cap cuticle (pileipellis) is an ixocutis (parallel hyphae wide embedded in a gelatinous matrix). Stipitipellis is...
- perpendicular to the surface and forming a layer 6–22 μm wide—or rarely an ixocutis, a layer of gelatinized hyphae 2–11 μm wide. The cap surface, unlike that...
- that are repent, that is, that run parallel to the pileus surface. In an ixocutis, the hyphae are gelatinous. In a tri****rm, the outermost hyphae emerge...
- are four-spored, and measure 37–48 by 8–11 μm. The cap cuticle is an ixocutis (a tissue layer on the surface of a mushroom made of a layer of gelatinous...
- cylindrical, four-spored, and measure 50–70 by 9–11 μm. The cap cuticle is an ixocutis (made of gelatinous hyphae that run parallel to the cap surface) up to...
- hyphae arranged more or less parallel to the cap surface (a form known as ixocutis); the thin-walled, threadlike hyphae of this layer are 2.5–7.3 μm wide...