- directly. This
disambiguation page
lists articles ****ociated with the
title Saprophytes. If an
internal link led you here, you may wish to
change the link to...
-
sometimes called saprobes.
Saprotrophic plants or
bacterial flora are
called saprophytes (sapro- 'rotten material' + -phyte 'plant'),
although it is now believed[citation...
-
longer placed in the
plant kingdom.
Plants that were once
considered saprophytes, such as non-photosynthetic
orchids and monotropes, are now
known to...
- The
honey fungus,
Armillaria mellea, is a
parasite of trees, and a
saprophyte feeding on the
trees it has killed....
-
beneficial commensals,
which grow on the skin and
mucous membranes, and
saprophytes,
which grow
mainly in the soil and in
decaying matter. The
blood and...
- and has
about 30
different species. It is a
plant parasite as well as
saprophytes on both
agricultural and
forest trees. It
produces stout, dark, branching...
-
soils may be as
harmless or even
beneficial plant endophytes or soil
saprophytes, many
strains within the F.
oxysporum complex are soil
borne pathogens...
-
important diseases of br****icas worldwide.
These bacteria are
facultative saprophytes,
meaning that they are
typically parasitic while also
having the ability...
- are
considered to be Gram positive. Some
mycobacteria are free-living
saprophytes, but many are
pathogens that
cause disease in
animals and humans. Mycobacterium...
- cell surface,
often at a cytostome,
although many
groups were
merely saprophytes; it
included the
majority of
colourless flagellates, and even many "apochlorotic"...