Skip to content
Category

Fungus ecology

page 1
mycorrhiza
thumb|Introductory video animation providing some basic information about mycorrhizas.
endophyte
thumb|Transmission electron microscope image of a cross section through a soybean (Glycine max) [[root nodule. The nitrogen fixing bacteria, and fungi Bradyrhizobium japonicum, infects the roots and establishes a symbiosis. This high magnification image shows part of a cell with single bacteroid (bacterium-like cell or modified bacterial cell) within their symbiosomes. In this image, you can also see endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus and cell wall.]]
coarse woody debris
fallen dead trees and the remains of large branches on the ground in forests, rivers, or wetlands
Ectomycorrhiza
thumbnail|Ectomycorrhizal symbiosis, showing root tips with fungal mycelium from the genus [[Amanita]]
Mycorrhizal network
underground hyphal networks that connect individual plants together
Microfungi
Microfungi or micromycetes are fungi—eukaryotic organisms such as molds, mildews and rusts—which have microscopic spore-producing structures. They exhibit tube tip-growth and have cell walls composed of chitin, a polymer of N-acetylglucosamine. Microfungi are a paraphyletic group, distinguished from macrofungi only by the absence of a large, multicellular fruiting body. They are ubiquitous in all terrestrial and freshwater and marine environments, and grow in plants, soil, water, insects, cattle rumens, hair, and skin. Most of the fungal body consists of microscopic threads, called hyphae, ext
mycobiota
Mycobiota (plural noun, no singular) are a group of all the fungi present in a particular geographic region (e.g. "the mycobiota of Ireland") or habitat type (e.g. "the mycobiota of cocoa"). An analogous term for Mycobiota is funga.