Teleomorph

Fungi are placed into particular taxa based on reproductive similarities. Sexual reproduction is the most evolutionarily conserved means of reproduction and thus used to determine evolutionally relatedness (systematics). Many fungi reproduce both sexually and asexually. This is particularly true in the group Ascomycota. Often only one method of reproduction is observable at a specific point in time or under specific environmental conditions. In these cases, mycologists have devised two names for the particular fungus. The teleomorph name describes the fungus when reproducing sexually. The anamorph names refers to the fungus when reproducing asexually. The holomorph name refers to the "whole fungus", encompassing both methods. This system is complicated and often confusing but can be a useful method for plant pathologists trying to identify a pathogen. Fungi that do not produce a teleomorph stage (or in cases in which it has yet to be observed) are placed into the Deuteromycota.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
basketball at the 2004 summer olympics (team squads)
havana sugar kings
houghton house bedfordshire
francis cabrel
samuel belzberg
intelligent machines research corporation
let's stay together (song)
groland
steve appleton
phenolate
red barn
san marcos (fictional)
liberation in north korea
j.r. simplot
vo duc van
david burke
texas tortoise
bloodshot (album)
into
shakespeare in the park
angelo medina
canon eos 650
cece peniston
ladies invited
x airways
luigi chinetti
diane bish
cape breton screaming eagles
nightmares...and other tales from the vinyl jungle
hydropenia
harry danning
troilus
hotline (album)
serpa pinto
peel cathedral
publishers weekly
diplomatic license plates in the united states
100 deeds for eddie mcdowd
pony puff princess
paolo boselli
members of the australian house of representatives, 1983 1984
for real
bethany college (kansas)
jon st. john