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The natural habitat of the three species of Sordaria that have been the principal subjects in genetic studies is dung of herbivorous animals. The species S. fimicola is common and worldwide in distribution. The species of Sordaria are similar morphologically, producing black perithecia containing asci with eight dark ascospores in a linear ...
After landing onto a suitable surface, unlike conidia, ascospores of Blumeria graminis showed a more variable developmental patterns. [3] The fungi Saccharomyces produces ascospores when grown on V-8 medium, acetate ascospore agar, or Gorodkowa medium. These ascospores are globose and located in asci. Each ascus contains one to four ascospores.
Sordaria Stellatospora. The Sordariaceae are a family of perithecial fungi within the Sordariales order. [1] ... Their ascospores are brown to black, ...
The order Sordariales is one of the most diverse taxonomic groups within the Sordariomycetes (subdivision Pezizomycotina, division Ascomycota). [1]Species in the order Sordariales have a broad range of ecological diversity, containing lignicolous, herbicolous and coprophilous taxa. [2]
Sordaria is a genus of microscopic fungi. It is commonly found in the feces of herbivores. The genus has a widespread distribution, and contains 12 species. [1]
Sordaria macrospora is a species of coprophilous (dung-colonizing) fungus. [1] It is one of several fungal model organisms in biology, e.g. the model of fruiting body development in Ascomycetes. It is a homothallic, self-fertile organism. [2] Ascospores issued from a diploid heterozygous at the spore-color locus, segregate as yellow and black.
Triangularia setosa was first described in Germany in the year 1873 under its basionym Sordaria setosa by G. Winter. [5] In 1883, the fungus was given the name Podospora setosa by mycologist Niessl. [6] Since 1883, P. setosa has had synonymy within multiple genera including Pleurage (1898), Philocopra (1907), and Cladocheate (1912).
Ascospores broadly fusiform, ellipsoidal, or nearly spherical, unicellular, hyaline to yellowish brown or olive-brown, becoming dark and opaque at maturity, ascospore wall with longitudinal ribs or pitted, occasionally nearly smooth, 1–2 (but rarely up to 12) germ pores disposed at the ends of the ascospores, gelatinous sheaths or appendages ...