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ASCOCARP

  • Ascocarp
  • Fruiting body of an ascomycete fungus

    An ascocarp, or ascoma (pl.: ascomata), is the fruiting body (sporocarp) of an ascomycete phylum fungus. It consists of very tightly interwoven hyphae

    Ascocarp

    Ascocarp

  • Sporocarp (fungus)
  • Fungal structure on which spore-producing structures are borne

    of an ascomycete is known as an ascocarp. Many shapes and morphologies are found in both basidiocarps and ascocarps; these features play an important

    Sporocarp (fungus)

    Sporocarp (fungus)

    Sporocarp_(fungus)

  • Cordyceps
  • Genus of fungi

    tissue, while the elongated fruit body (ascocarp) may be cylindrical, branched, or of complex shape. The ascocarp bears many small, flask-shaped perithecia

    Cordyceps

    Cordyceps

    Cordyceps

  • Hymenium
  • Spore-bearing tissue layer in fungi

    hymenial layer with the ascus on the ascocarp mycelium and the ascospores can be seen within the ascus. A=Ascocarp mycelium, B=Hymenial layer, C=Ascus

    Hymenium

    Hymenium

  • Ascus
  • Spore-bearing cell in ascomycete fungi

    in a fruiting body which is visible to the naked eye, here called an ascocarp or ascoma. In other cases, such as single-celled yeasts, no such structures

    Ascus

    Ascus

    Ascus

  • Ascomycota
  • Division or phylum of fungi

    occasionally readily visible fruiting structure, the ascocarp (also called an ascoma). Ascocarps come in a very large variety of shapes: cup-shaped, club-shaped

    Ascomycota

    Ascomycota

    Ascomycota

  • Firewalker (The X-Files)
  • 9th episode of the 2nd season of The X-Files

    in his neck. Tanaka flees into the woods and dies when a tentacle-like ascocarp bursts out of his throat. An autopsy by Scully finds sand (silicon dioxide)

    Firewalker (The X-Files)

    Firewalker_(The_X-Files)

  • Pileus (mycology)
  • Mushroom cap

    the pileus (pl.: pilei) is the cap or cap-like part of a basidiocarp or ascocarp (fungal fruiting body) that supports a spore-bearing surface, the hymenium

    Pileus (mycology)

    Pileus (mycology)

    Pileus_(mycology)

  • Geoglossum
  • Genus of fungi

    by dark, club-shaped, terrestrial ascocarps with a fertile hymenium continuing downward from the apex of the ascocarp along the stipe, eventually intergrading

    Geoglossum

    Geoglossum

    Geoglossum

  • Fungus
  • Organism belonging to kingdom Fungi

    formed, in which karyogamy (nuclear fusion) occurs. Asci are embedded in an ascocarp, or fruiting body. Karyogamy in the asci is followed immediately by meiosis

    Fungus

    Fungus

    Fungus

  • Dikaryon
  • Nuclear feature unique to certain fungi

    Ascomycota this attribute is most often found in the ascogenous hyphae and ascocarp while the bulk of the mycelium remains monokaryotic. In the Basidiomycota

    Dikaryon

    Dikaryon

    Dikaryon

  • Tolypocladium inflatum
  • Species of fungus

    (teleomorph) it is a parasite on scarab beetles. It forms a small, compound ascocarp that arises from the cadaver of its host beetle. In its asexual stage (anamorph)

    Tolypocladium inflatum

    Tolypocladium_inflatum

  • Phylum
  • Taxonomic rank

    Ascomycota Bladder fungus Ascomycetes, sac fungi Tend to have fruiting bodies (ascocarp). Filamentous, producing hyphae separated by septa. Can reproduce asexually

    Phylum

    Phylum

    Phylum

  • Talaromyces
  • Genus of fungi

    Chester Ray Benjamin, species in the genus form soft, cottony fruit bodies (ascocarps) with cell walls made of tightly interwoven hyphae. The fruit bodies are

    Talaromyces

    Talaromyces

    Talaromyces

  • Urnula craterium
  • Species of fungus

    opening. The flesh of the ascocarp walls is tough and initially gelatinous, later becoming leathery. The exterior of the ascocarp is brownish black to black

    Urnula craterium

    Urnula craterium

    Urnula_craterium

  • Morchellaceae
  • Family of fungi

    remaining genera of Morchellaceae are distinguished by ascocarp morphology. Morchella species have an ascocarp with a sponge-like pileus, with a hollow stipe

    Morchellaceae

    Morchellaceae

    Morchellaceae

  • Podetium
  • club like, cupped, or branched in shape and may or may not contain the ascocarp, the fruiting body, of the lichen. It is not considered part of the primary

    Podetium

    Podetium

    Podetium

  • Hypocreopsis rhododendri
  • Endangered species of fungus

    hazel gloves due to the resemblance of its orange-brown, radiating lobular ascocarp to rubber gloves, and because it is found on hazel (Corylus avellana) stems

    Hypocreopsis rhododendri

    Hypocreopsis rhododendri

    Hypocreopsis_rhododendri

  • Basidiocarp
  • Fungal structure

    truffles have arisen independently many times just within the Agaricales. Ascocarp Conidium "MykoWeb: Evolution & Morphology in the Homobasidiomycetes". www

    Basidiocarp

    Basidiocarp

    Basidiocarp

  • Conidium
  • Asexual, non-motile spore of a fungus

    risk groups and antifungal drug resistance. Fungi portal Arthroconidium Ascocarp Basidiocarp Budding Gemma Phialide Jansonius, D.C., Gregor, Me., 1996.

    Conidium

    Conidium

    Conidium

  • Eurotiomycetes
  • Class of fungi

    Eurotiomycetes is a large class of ascomycetes with cleistothecial ascocarps within the subphylum Pezizomycotina, currently containing around 3810 species

    Eurotiomycetes

    Eurotiomycetes

    Eurotiomycetes

  • Morchella esculenta
  • Species of fungus

    ISBN 0-295-96480-4. Ower R. (1982). "Notes on the development of the morel ascocarp: Morchella esculenta". Mycologia. 74 (1): 142–44. doi:10.2307/3792639.

    Morchella esculenta

    Morchella esculenta

    Morchella_esculenta

  • Pulvinula cinnabarina
  • Species of fungus

    occurring at fire sites. The small (up to 1 cm across) orange, cushion-shaped ascocarps appear in summer and early autumn. Jordan, Michael (2004). The Encyclopedia

    Pulvinula cinnabarina

    Pulvinula_cinnabarina

  • Hypha
  • Long, filamentous structure in fungi and Actinobacteria

    'aerial.' Aerial hyphae of fungi produce asexual reproductive spores. Ascocarp – Fruiting body of an ascomycete fungus Hartig net – Network of inward-growing

    Hypha

    Hypha

    Hypha

  • Tuber magnatum
  • Species of edible fungus

    (2018) and further studies in that direction are recommended. Fruitbodies (ascocarps) need at least 0.4 °C (1st percentile) during their formation, which occurs

    Tuber magnatum

    Tuber magnatum

    Tuber_magnatum

  • Peziza petersii
  • Species of fungus

    European species with rather small and irregular brown saucer-shaped ascocarps up to 5 cm in diameter. It is most often encountered in tightly packed

    Peziza petersii

    Peziza petersii

    Peziza_petersii

  • Geoglossaceae
  • Family of fungi

    Geoglossomycetes. These fungi are broadly known as earth tongues. The ascocarps of most species in the family Geoglossaceae are terrestrial and are generally

    Geoglossaceae

    Geoglossaceae

    Geoglossaceae

  • Aleuria aurantia
  • Species of fungus

    ascomycete fungus in the order Pezizales. The bright orange, cup-shaped ascocarps often resemble orange peels strewn on the ground, giving this species

    Aleuria aurantia

    Aleuria aurantia

    Aleuria_aurantia

  • Morchella
  • Genus of fungi

    S2CID 6740906. Buscot F, Roux J (1987). "Association between living roots and ascocarps of Morchella rotunda". Transactions of the British Mycological Society

    Morchella

    Morchella

    Morchella

  • Peziza vesiculosa
  • Species of fungus

    apothecial fungus belonging to the family Pezizaceae. The pale, cup-shaped ascocarps grow to 1–6 centimetres (1⁄2–2+1⁄2 inches) in width and often form clusters

    Peziza vesiculosa

    Peziza vesiculosa

    Peziza_vesiculosa

  • Sordariomycetes
  • Class of fungi

    Sordariomycetes A single Xylaria longipes ascocarp Scientific classification Kingdom: Fungi Division: Ascomycota Clade: Saccharomyceta Subdivision: Pezizomycotina

    Sordariomycetes

    Sordariomycetes

    Sordariomycetes

  • Gyromitra caroliniana
  • Species of fungus

    where it fruits in early spring soon after snowmelt. The fruit body, or ascocarp, appears on the ground in woodland, and can grow to massive sizes. The

    Gyromitra caroliniana

    Gyromitra caroliniana

    Gyromitra_caroliniana

  • Saccharomycotina
  • Subdivision of fungi

    members of Saccharomycotina reproduce by budding and they do not produce ascocarps (fruiting bodies). The subdivision includes a single class: Saccharomycetes

    Saccharomycotina

    Saccharomycotina

    Saccharomycotina

  • Hypocreopsis lichenoides
  • Species of fungus

    gloves due to the resemblance of the ascocarp to rubber gloves, and because it is usually found on willow trees. Ascocarp Usually single, rarely in groups

    Hypocreopsis lichenoides

    Hypocreopsis lichenoides

    Hypocreopsis_lichenoides

  • Ceratocystis paradoxa
  • Species of fungus

    teleomorph or sexual reproduction stage of infection. This stage contains ascocarps, or sacs/fruiting bodies, which contain the sexually produced inoculating

    Ceratocystis paradoxa

    Ceratocystis_paradoxa

  • Trichoglossum hirsutum
  • Species of fungus

    distinguishable. At least one of these cryptic species occurs in both continents. Ascocarps are club-shaped, up to 9 centimetres (3+1⁄2 in) tall, black to dark brown

    Trichoglossum hirsutum

    Trichoglossum hirsutum

    Trichoglossum_hirsutum

  • Pecan anthracnose
  • Fungal disease of pecan trees

    overwintering stage and survives as an ascocarp. The ascocarp can survive on fallen nuts, leaves and other plant debris. Ascocarps can be spread by the wind or

    Pecan anthracnose

    Pecan_anthracnose

  • Fitzpatrickella operculata
  • Species of fungus

    characterised by the presence of doliiform, black ascocarps with an obvious area for dehiscence to occur. The ascocarps of Fitzpatrickella operculata tend to almost

    Fitzpatrickella operculata

    Fitzpatrickella_operculata

  • Tuber rufum
  • Species of truffle

    it is culinary unpopular with no commercial value. The fruiting body (ascocarp) of Tuber rufum is a hypogeous, subglobose, or irregular sporocarp approximately

    Tuber rufum

    Tuber rufum

    Tuber_rufum

  • Fungi imperfecti
  • Fungal classification based on asexual characteristics

    Winter 1884, revealed it to be the anamorphic stage of a teleomorph (the ascocarp or fruiting body of the sexual reproductive stage of a fungus), which was

    Fungi imperfecti

    Fungi imperfecti

    Fungi_imperfecti

  • Peziza arvernensis
  • Species of fungus

    species of apothecial fungus belonging to the family Pezizaceae. The ascocarps appear as cups, growing up to 8 cm (3+1⁄8 in) across. Their exterior is

    Peziza arvernensis

    Peziza arvernensis

    Peziza_arvernensis

  • Xanthoriicola
  • Single-species fungal genus

    bodies (ascocarps) of its host lichen. Its mycelium (fungal threads) develops in the thecium (spore-producing layer) of the host's ascocarps, causing

    Xanthoriicola

    Xanthoriicola

    Xanthoriicola

  • Geopora arenicola
  • Species of fungus

    uncommon species found in Europe and Uzbekistan. The fungus forms a rounded ascocarp underground on sandy loam soils. This fruit body remains subterranean for

    Geopora arenicola

    Geopora arenicola

    Geopora_arenicola

  • Geopora sumneriana
  • Species of fungus

    family Pyronemataceae. This fungus forms a rounded brown, roughly hairy ascocarp underground. This fruit body remains subterranean for most of the year

    Geopora sumneriana

    Geopora sumneriana

    Geopora_sumneriana

  • Eutypella parasitica
  • Species of fungus

    New Disease Reports. 16: 29. Denis Lachance; James E. Kuntz (1970). "Ascocarp development of Eutypella parasifica". Canadian Journal of Botany. 48 (11):

    Eutypella parasitica

    Eutypella_parasitica

  • List of Greek and Latin roots in English/A–G
  • All Latin and Greek roots beginning with G

    bag Greek ἀσκός (askós), ἀσκίδιον (askídion) ascidium, ascites, ascitic, ascocarp, ascoma, ascomycete, Ascomycota, ascospore, ascus asin- donkey, ass Latin

    List of Greek and Latin roots in English/A–G

    List_of_Greek_and_Latin_roots_in_English/A–G

  • Lophiostoma
  • Genus of fungi

    sexual reproducing with ascocarp in the form of a perithecium and asexual reproduction in the form of conidia. The ascocarp are usually flaskshaped or

    Lophiostoma

    Lophiostoma

    Lophiostoma

  • Caliciopsis
  • Genus of fungi

    from which both sexual fruiting bodies (ascocarps) and tiny male structures (spermogonia) arise. The ascocarps are typically stalked, with a narrow stipe

    Caliciopsis

    Caliciopsis

    Caliciopsis

  • Tuber melanosporum
  • Black truffle

    described the black truffle in 1831. The round, dark brown fruiting bodies (ascocarps) have a black-brown skin with small pyramidal cusps. They have a strong

    Tuber melanosporum

    Tuber melanosporum

    Tuber_melanosporum

  • Largest fungal fruit bodies
  • These are known as sporocarps, or, more specifically, basidiocarps and ascocarps for the Basidiomycota and Ascomycota respectively. These fruit bodies

    Largest fungal fruit bodies

    Largest fungal fruit bodies

    Largest_fungal_fruit_bodies

  • Xylaria hypoxylon
  • Species of fungus

    bodies (ascocarps) are cylindrical or flattened with dimensions of 3–8 centimetres (1+1⁄8–3+1⁄8 in) tall × 2–8 mm thick. The erect ascocarps are often

    Xylaria hypoxylon

    Xylaria hypoxylon

    Xylaria_hypoxylon

  • Asterina (fungus)
  • Genus of fungi

    Species in the genus generally have circular thyriothecia (an inverted ascocarp) with stellate dehiscence (division), lateral appressoria (infecting cell)

    Asterina (fungus)

    Asterina (fungus)

    Asterina_(fungus)

  • Glossary of mycology
  • of a perithecium (ascocarp) of ascomycetes. 2.  Any pore by which spores are freed from a fruit body, including both the ascocarp version as well as

    Glossary of mycology

    Glossary of mycology

    Glossary_of_mycology

  • Puffball
  • Form type of fungus

    Similarly, the true truffles (Tuberales) are gasteroid Ascomycota. Their ascocarps are called tuberothecia. Lycoperdonosis Freedman, Louise; Mycological

    Puffball

    Puffball

    Puffball

  • Pycnolemma
  • Single-species fungal genus

    tropical dry forests and is distinguished by pycnoascocarps, in which ascocarps develop from ascogonia beneath pycnidia. The species has a scattered distribution

    Pycnolemma

    Pycnolemma

  • Chrysothrix candelaris
  • Species of lichen

    although it has also been recorded growing on rock. It does not show ascocarps or other reproductive structures, belonging to the group commonly known

    Chrysothrix candelaris

    Chrysothrix candelaris

    Chrysothrix_candelaris

  • Xylaria polymorpha
  • Species of fungus

    singly or are borne in one of several types of fruiting structures, or ascocarps, and on the method of discharge of the ascospores. Unlike some species

    Xylaria polymorpha

    Xylaria polymorpha

    Xylaria_polymorpha

  • Geopora sepulta
  • Species of fungus

    was a specimen collected in Kent in 1995. This fungus forms a rounded ascocarp underground on sandy loam soils. This fruiting body remains subterranean

    Geopora sepulta

    Geopora_sepulta

  • Black sigatoka
  • Pathogenic fungus

    of leaf are the fungus itself. The sign of the pathogen consists of the ascocarp which holds the ascospores used for dissemination to infect healthy new

    Black sigatoka

    Black sigatoka

    Black_sigatoka

  • Phaeotremella translucens
  • Species of fungus

    pustular, gelatinous basidiocarps (fruit bodies) and is parasitic on ascocarps of Lophodermium species on decaying pine needles. It was originally described

    Phaeotremella translucens

    Phaeotremella_translucens

  • Alveolus
  • General anatomical term for a concave cavity or pit

    angiosperms Pits on the fruiting bodies of fungi such as Boletus or the ascocarps of fungi such as typical ascomycetes Pits on the valves of the tests of

    Alveolus

    Alveolus

  • Cladonia arbuscula
  • Species of cup lichen

    thallus (podetium), with cup shaped podetia (4–10 cm tall) bearing terminal ascocarps contained in apothecial structures. The coloring of C. arbuscula varies

    Cladonia arbuscula

    Cladonia arbuscula

    Cladonia_arbuscula

  • Balsamia guenerii
  • Species of fungus

    locate specimens, which are typically found 3–5 cm deep. The fruiting body (ascocarp) measures 0.9–3.3 cm wide by 0.7–2.5 cm tall, with an irregularly rounded

    Balsamia guenerii

    Balsamia_guenerii

  • Turf necrotic ring spot
  • Species of fungus

    a fungal pathogen that is an ascomycete that produces ascospores in an ascocarp (6). They survive over winter, or any unfavorable condition as sclerotia

    Turf necrotic ring spot

    Turf_necrotic_ring_spot

  • Podosphaera pannosa
  • Species of fungus

    survive the winter in a structure composed of hyphae called an ascocarp. The specific ascocarp is a chasmothecium, or cleistothecium, and has a circular shape

    Podosphaera pannosa

    Podosphaera pannosa

    Podosphaera_pannosa

  • Tuber aestivum
  • Summer or burgundy truffle

    less intense aroma. Burgundy truffles are somewhat large, with bodies (ascocarps) from 2 to 10 centimetres (1 to 4 inches) in diameter. Their brown or

    Tuber aestivum

    Tuber aestivum

    Tuber_aestivum

  • Myxotrichaceae
  • Family of fungi

    drywall, and decomposing materials. They produce black, mesh-like, setose ascocarps with small, fusiform ascospores. Myxotrichum deflexum produces a pinkish-red

    Myxotrichaceae

    Myxotrichaceae

    Myxotrichaceae

  • Dirina sorocarpa
  • Species of lichen

    are 21–30 by 4–5 μm. The species epithet alludes to the fact that the ascocarps, if they are present, are often partially sorediate or are produced on

    Dirina sorocarpa

    Dirina_sorocarpa

  • Leotia
  • Genus of fungi

    their fruiting bodies. Leotia species are characterized by their capitate ascocarps. Within the class Leotiomycetes, Leotia species produce large fruiting

    Leotia

    Leotia

    Leotia

  • Chlorociboria
  • Genus of fungi

    featured in Tunbridge ware. Blue-green stain is evident year-round, with ascocarp production occurring from summer to fall. Chlorociboria aeruginascens (Nyl

    Chlorociboria

    Chlorociboria

    Chlorociboria

  • Ruhlandiella
  • Genus of fungi

    exothecial ascocarp, highly ornamented ascospores, and paraphyses covered with gelatinous sheathes that greatly exceed asci in length. The color of ascocarp varies

    Ruhlandiella

    Ruhlandiella

    Ruhlandiella

  • Glossary of phytopathology
  • body (ascocarp) containing asci. antiseptic appressorium (pl. appressoria) arbuscular mycorrhiza (abbr. AM; syn. endomycorrhiza) arbuscule ascocarp (syn

    Glossary of phytopathology

    Glossary_of_phytopathology

  • Morchella elata
  • Species of fungus

    purpurescens, characterised by the purple- or pink-colored tinges of its ascocarps, is now considered to belong to a phylogenetically distinct lineage (Richard

    Morchella elata

    Morchella elata

    Morchella_elata

  • Megalotremis
  • Genus of lichen-forming fungi

    Megalotremis is a pyrenolichen genus, meaning its species have perithecioid ascocarps: spherical or flask-shaped, sessile or partly immersed in the thallus

    Megalotremis

    Megalotremis

  • Botryotinia polyblastis
  • Species of fungus

    favorable to form an ascocarp. Botryotinia polyblastis forms an apothecium, a wide, open, saucer shaped fruiting body as its ascocarp. The apothecium contains

    Botryotinia polyblastis

    Botryotinia_polyblastis

  • Lobothallia praeradiosa
  • Species of lichen-forming fungus

    genus Aspicilia, its derivation, together with remarks on cryptolecanorine ascocarp organisation in other genera of the Lecanorales (lichenised ascomycetes)]

    Lobothallia praeradiosa

    Lobothallia praeradiosa

    Lobothallia_praeradiosa

  • Take-all
  • Fungal plant disease

    eventually dies, the cycle repeats and the fungi once again overwinters as an ascocarp inside the host plant and plant debris. This pathogen may be considered

    Take-all

    Take-all

    Take-all

  • Peziza micropus
  • Species of fungus

    tends to thrive in the aftermath of outbreaks of Dutch elm disease. The ascocarps are irregular pale brown saucers up to 5 cm (2.0 in) in diameter, appearing

    Peziza micropus

    Peziza micropus

    Peziza_micropus

  • Elsinoë mangiferae
  • Species of fungus

    mangiferae produces brownish ascocarps in the host epidermis. Globular asci are dispersed in ascocarps, and contain 1–8 hyaline ascocarps. Host tissues are not

    Elsinoë mangiferae

    Elsinoë_mangiferae

  • Geoglossum dunense
  • Species of fungus

    and spores with 1–3(−5) septa, but produces much larger brownish-grey ascocarps up to 4–5 cm tall, has more slender cylindrical spores measuring 30–40

    Geoglossum dunense

    Geoglossum dunense

    Geoglossum_dunense

  • List of Greek and Latin roots in English/A
  • All Latin and Greek roots beginning with A

    bag Greek ἀσκός (askós), ἀσκίδιον (askídion) ascidium, ascites, ascitic, ascocarp, ascoma, ascomycete, Ascomycota, ascospore, ascus asin- donkey, ass Latin

    List of Greek and Latin roots in English/A

    List_of_Greek_and_Latin_roots_in_English/A

  • Helvella latispora
  • Species of fungus

    species of fungus in the family Helvellaceae of the order Pezizales. Ascocarps appear in late summer and autumn as pale stems up to 5 cm in height topped

    Helvella latispora

    Helvella latispora

    Helvella_latispora

  • Xylaria
  • Genus of fungi

    is the most conspicuous because of its erect, 3–7 cm tall, antler-like ascocarps (fruitbodies) which are black at the base (where the perithecia are embedded)

    Xylaria

    Xylaria

    Xylaria

  • Hysteriaceae
  • Family of fungi

    pseudoparaphysate Pleospora-type centrum (all the structures enclosed within the ascocarp), in which cellular, septate pseudoparaphyses grow downwards from the cavity

    Hysteriaceae

    Hysteriaceae

    Hysteriaceae

  • Lagenulopsis bispora
  • Species of fungus

    meaning "flask," or "bottle," referring to the elongated shape of its ascocarp. The species name bispora ("two spores") refers to the presence of only

    Lagenulopsis bispora

    Lagenulopsis_bispora

  • Tuber indicum
  • Species of truffle

    Peigui; Tian, Wei; Qiao, Peng (2022-02-22). "Microbial communities of ascocarps and soils in a natural habitat of Tuber indicum". Archives of Microbiology

    Tuber indicum

    Tuber indicum

    Tuber_indicum

  • Ceratocystis coerulescens
  • Species of fungus

    eight in asci. The asci are protected by a perithecium, a flask-shaped ascocarp, in which the pathogen overwinters. Ascospores are the sexual spores and

    Ceratocystis coerulescens

    Ceratocystis coerulescens

    Ceratocystis_coerulescens

  • Dictyosporium
  • Genus of fungi

    The teleomorph is characterized by a dark brown, subglobose, superficial ascocarp. It has bitunicate, cylindrical asci. The ascospores are fusiform, hyaline

    Dictyosporium

    Dictyosporium

    Dictyosporium

  • Gray leaf spot
  • Fungal plant disease

    has not been observed in turf but is predicted to use perithecium as the ascocarp structure to form ascospores. This form of the pathogen is known as Magnaporthe

    Gray leaf spot

    Gray_leaf_spot

  • Glossary of lichen terms
  • used to describe spore morphology. apothecium Plural apothecia. A type of ascocarp that is open, saucer-shaped or cup-shaped, and in which the hymenium is

    Glossary of lichen terms

    Glossary of lichen terms

    Glossary_of_lichen_terms

  • Physcia stellaris
  • Species of lichen-forming fungus

    bodies shaped like a plate with a ring around them called lecanorine. Ascocarp containing 8 brown, septate ascospores ranging in size from 15-18 μm. Is

    Physcia stellaris

    Physcia stellaris

    Physcia_stellaris

  • Phyllachorales
  • Order of fungi

    was added in 2020. In general, members of the Phyllachoraceae produce an ascocarp embedded in the host tissue, mostly within a stroma or beneath an epidermal

    Phyllachorales

    Phyllachorales

    Phyllachorales

  • Coccomyces dentatus
  • Species of fungus

    can be distinguished by the following characters: three- to four-sided ascocarps; ascospores with a single septum; and longer, wider asci measuring 110–135

    Coccomyces dentatus

    Coccomyces dentatus

    Coccomyces_dentatus

  • Crinigera
  • Genus of fungi

    Schmidt-paratype 214 to Dryosphaera navigans. The globose, light brown cleistothecial ascocarp is 310-324 μm with a 30-36 μm subiculum that attaches to the substrate

    Crinigera

    Crinigera

  • Herpomycetales
  • Order of fungi

    ISSN 0027-5514. PMID 32297827. S2CID 215795704. Hill, Terry W. (1977). "Ascocarp ultrastructure of Herpomyces sp. (Laboulbeniales) and its phylogenetic

    Herpomycetales

    Herpomycetales

    Herpomycetales

  • Aleuria
  • Genus of fungi

    distinctly reticulate. Species are typically (but not always) bright in color. ascocarps are typically over 1 cm in diameter. Aleuria alpina Aleuria amplissima

    Aleuria

    Aleuria

    Aleuria

  • Cladonia didyma
  • Species of lichen

    fungal symbionts under the Ascomycota phylum with characteristic red ascocarps containing sexually reproductive asci. Initially named Scyphophorus didymus

    Cladonia didyma

    Cladonia didyma

    Cladonia_didyma

  • Pseudeurotium ovale
  • Species of fungus

    the Ascomycota, and therefore the fruiting body of P. ovale is called an ascocarp. Pseudeurotium ovale has a cleisothecium, or a fruiting body with a round

    Pseudeurotium ovale

    Pseudeurotium_ovale

  • Julella
  • Genus of fungi

    spores per ascus and larger ascocarps (typically > 0.5 mm), whereas 8-spored species separate by spore size and ascocarp size—J. vitrispora with spores

    Julella

    Julella

    Julella

  • Evernia esorediosa
  • Species of lichen

    species of lichen in the family Parmeliaceae. It has no soralia, but many ascocarps. In a study it has been found that its mycobiont contains hypostrepsilic

    Evernia esorediosa

    Evernia esorediosa

    Evernia_esorediosa

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Online names & meanings

  • Kabilan | கபீலாந
  • Boy/Male

    Tamil

    Kabilan | கபீலாந

    Lord Ganesh

  • Rosann
  • Girl/Female

    American, Australian, Danish

    Rosann

    Rose

  • Eudocia
  • Girl/Female

    Australian, Greek

    Eudocia

    Esteemed; Well Thought of

  • Eli
  • Boy/Male

    American, Basque, British, Chinese, Christian, Danish, English, French, German, Greek, Hawaiian, Hebrew, Swedish

    Eli

    Uplifted; Elevation; The Lord will Help; The Lord is My God; Ascend; My God; Ascent; Defender of Mankind; Offering

  • AZURIAH
  • Male

    English

    AZURIAH

    Variant spelling of English Azariah, AZURIAH means "help of God."

  • Lithisha
  • Girl/Female

    Hindu

    Lithisha

    Happiness

  • Thakappanswami | தாகாப்பந்ஸ்வாமீ
  • Boy/Male

    Tamil

    Thakappanswami | தாகாப்பந்ஸ்வாமீ

    Lord Murugan

  • MELEK
  • Male

    Hebrew

    MELEK

    (מֶלֶךְ) Hebrew name MELEK means "king." In the bible, this is the name of the second son of Micah. In use by the Armenians.

  • SUNDER
  • Male

    Hindi/Indian

    SUNDER

    Variant spelling of Hindi Sundar, SUNDER means "beautiful."

  • Hemavala
  • Girl/Female

    Hindu, Indian

    Hemavala

    Love of Kind

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Other words and meanings similar to

ASCOCARP

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