Basidiomycota, including: Puffball, Hymenomycete, Rust (fungus), Bracket Fungus, Soybean Rust, Smut (fungus), Orchid Mycorrhiza, Ustilaginomycotina, ... Sphacelotheca Reiliana, Laeticorticium Roseum Buy on Amazon
Facebook LinkedIn

Basidiomycota, including: Puffball, Hymenomycete, Rust (fungus), Bracket Fungus, Soybean Rust, Smut (fungus), Orchid Mycorrhiza, Ustilaginomycotina, ... Sphacelotheca Reiliana, Laeticorticium Roseum

13.85 17.75 -22% USD

Usually ships in 1 to 3 weeks

Book Details
Author(s) Hephaestus Books
Publisher Hephaestus Books
ISBN / ASIN 1243375981
ISBN-13 9781243375988
Availability Usually ships in 1 to 3 weeks
Marketplace United States 🇺🇸
Ratings & Reviews No reviews yet — be the first!

No reviews yet.

Description
Hephaestus Books represents a new publishing paradigm, allowing disparate content sources to be curated into cohesive, relevant, and informative books. To date, this content has been curated from Wikipedia articles and images under Creative Commons licensing, although as Hephaestus Books continues to increase in scope and dimension, more licensed and public domain content is being added. We believe books such as this represent a new and exciting lexicon in the sharing of human knowledge. This particular book is a collaboration focused on Basidiomycota.

More info: Basidiomycota is one of two large phyla that, together with the Ascomycota, comprise the subkingdom Dikarya (often referred to as the "higher fungi") within the Kingdom Fungi. More specifically the Basidiomycota include mushrooms, puffballs, stinkhorns, bracket fungi, other polypores, jelly fungi, boletes, chanterelles, earth stars, smuts, bunts, rusts, mirror yeasts, and the human pathogenic yeast Cryptococcus. Basically, Basidiomycota are filamentous fungi composed of hyphae (except for those forming yeasts), and reproducing sexually via the formation of specialized club-shaped end cells called basidia that normally bear external meiospores (usually four). These specialized spores are called basidiospores. However, some Basidiomycota reproduce asexually, and may or may not also reproduce sexually. Asexually reproducing Basidiomycota (discussed below) can be recognized as members of this phylum by gross similarity to others, by the formation of a distinctive anatomical feature (the clamp connection - see below), cell wall components, and definitively by phylogenetic molecular analysis of DNA sequence data.
Donate to EbookNetworking
No Prev
No Next