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- Basidiomycota - Wikipedia
Basidiomycota are filamentous fungi composed of hyphae (except for basidiomycota-yeast) and reproduce sexually via the formation of specialized club-shaped end cells called basidia that normally bear external meiospores (usually four)
- Basidiomycota | Mushrooms, Yeasts, Rusts | Britannica
Basidiomycota, large and diverse phylum of fungi (kingdom Fungi) that includes jelly and shelf fungi; mushrooms, puffballs, and stinkhorns; certain yeasts; and the rusts and smuts
- 8. 17H: Basidiomycota - The Club Fungi - Biology LibreTexts
Key Points The majority of edible fungi belong to the Phylum Basidiomycota The basidiomycota includes shelf fungus, toadstools, and smuts and rusts Unlike most fungi, basidiomycota reproduce sexually as opposed to asexually
- Basidiomycota: The Club Fungi | Biology for Majors II
The fungi in the Phylum Basidiomycota are easily recognizable under a light microscope by their club-shaped fruiting bodies called basidia (singular, basidium), which are the swollen terminal cell of a hypha
- Basidiomycota - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics
Basidiomycota is defined as a monophyletic group of fungi that includes over 31,000 species, such as mushrooms, smuts, and rusts, characterized by the production of meiospores on a club-shaped structure called a basidium
- Basidiomycetes - Characteristics, Reproduction, Importance and Examples
Basidiomycetes, commonly known as basidiomycota, are a diverse group of fungi These fungi are characterized by the presence of specialized spore-bearing structures called basidia, which are typically club-shaped and produce basidiospores, the sexual reproductive spores of basidiomycetes
- Basidiomycota - New World Encyclopedia
Basidiomycota is a major division (or phyla) of the kingdom Fungi, whose members typically are characterized by the presence of a basidium, a microscopic reproductive structure where sexual spores are produced
- Basidiomycetes - Life cycle, Characteristics, Significance, Mycelium . . .
As members of the Basidiomycota division, they stand alongside Ascomycota in the subkingdom Dikarya, often known as the “higher fungi” within the fungal kingdom
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