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- Conidium - Wikipedia
A conidium may form germ tubes (germination tubes) and or conidial anastomosis tubes (CATs) in specific conditions These two are some of the specialized hyphae that are formed by fungal conidia
- Conidium | Fungal Reproduction, Asexual Propagation Germination . . .
conidium, a type of asexual reproductive spore of fungi (kingdom Fungi) usually produced at the tip or side of hyphae (filaments that make up the body of a typical fungus) or on special spore-producing structures called conidiophores The spores detach when mature
- CONIDIUM Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of CONIDIUM is an asexual spore produced on a conidiophore of certain fungi
- Conidium - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics
Conidia (singular: conidium), also called spores, are asexual reproductive structures Conidia in Aspergillus species are single-celled structures that may be uni- or multinucleate
- Conidium - Academic Dictionaries and Encyclopedias
A conidium may form germ tubes (germination tubes) and or conidial anastomosis tubes (CATs) in specific conditions These two are some of the specialized hyphae that are formed by fungal conidia
- Factsheet - Conidium, conidia, conidiophore, conidiogenesis
A conidium (pl conidia) is an asexual, nonmotile fungal spore that develops externally or is liberated from the cell that formed it Conidiogenesis is the formation of asexual spores (conidia or conidiopspores)
- What Are Conidia and What Is Their Function? - Biology Insights
Conidia are asexual, non-motile spores produced by many species of fungi They are a primary means of reproduction and dispersal for these organisms Functionally, they can be compared to microscopic, dust-like particles that enable a fungus to propagate and colonize new environments
- Biology:Conidium - HandWiki
The word conidium comes from the Ancient Greek word for dust, κόνις (kónis) [3] They are also called mitospores due to the way they are generated through the cellular process of mitosis
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