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  2. Homothallism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homothallism

    However, homothallic meiosis may be maintained in fungi as an adaptation for surviving stressful conditions; a proposed benefit of meiosis is the promoted homologous meiotic recombinational repair of DNA damages that are ordinarily caused by a stressful environment.

  3. Aspergillus fischeri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aspergillus_fischeri

    There are two mating type when fungi reproducing when fungi reproduce in a sexual way. According to the number of mating type produced by individual, fungi thus to classfied into homothallic and heterothallic. And Aspergillus fischeri is homothallic, which can producing both mating type within one individuals.

  4. Heterothallism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heterothallism

    The term is applied particularly to distinguish heterothallic fungi, which require two compatible partners to produce sexual spores, from homothallic ones, which are capable of sexual reproduction from a single organism. In heterothallic fungi, two different individuals contribute nuclei to form a zygote.

  5. Basidiomycota - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basidiomycota

    These fungi are said to be homothallic, versus the normal heterothallic species with mating types. Others are secondarily homothallic, in that two compatible nuclei following meiosis migrate into each basidiospore, which is then dispersed as a pre-existing dikaryon. Often such species form only two spores per basidium, but that too varies.

  6. Syzygites - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syzygites

    Syzygites megalocarpus is a homothallic fungus, which means each individual contains both mating loci and can therefore self-fertilize to form zygospores. The genes identified in the Mucoromyoctina fungi Phycomyces and Rhizopus are named sexM and sexP for the minus (-) and plus (+) mating types which these gene define.

  7. Cochliobolus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cochliobolus

    Those fungi that need a partner to mate are referred to as heterothallic (self-sterile), and those fungi not needing a partner are referred to as homothallic (self-fertile). A study of DNA sequences of mating type loci from different heterothallic and homothallic species in the genus Cochliobolus suggests that homothallism can be derived from ...

  8. Aspergillus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aspergillus

    Sexual reproduction occurs in two fundamentally different ways in fungi. These are outcrossing (in heterothallic fungi) in which two different individuals contribute nuclei, and self-fertilization or selfing (in homothallic fungi) in which both nuclei are derived from the same individual. In recent years, sexual cycles have been discovered in ...

  9. Mucorales - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mucorales

    Some species are homothallic. The original report of sex in fungi, occurred two centuries ago, based on observations of the fungus Syzygites megalocarpus (Mucoromycotina) (reviewed by Idnurm [1]). This species, was subsequently used in 1904, to represent self-fertile species when the concept of two major mating strategies were developed for the ...