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Q: Are Septa always present in hyphae?
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Related questions

Are septa always present?

No


Porous cross-walls in the hyphae of fungi are called?

septa


Are the septa of the hyphal cross walls always present?

yes


Are Rhizopus hyphae coenocytic or septate?

Rhizpous hyphae are not divided, so are coenocytic.


Porous cross walls in the hyphae of fungi are called?

for plato users, its septa


What is coencytic hyphae?

Fungal mycelium in which hyphae lack septa (a wall, dividing a hypha into smaller ones) are known as "aseptate" or "coenocytic". So basically its hyphae without a cross wall.


Hyphae that have a dividing wall are what?

The hyphae that are found in most fungi are the ones with divided walls. The division of these walls is an internal cross wall called the septa.


3 In hyphae divided by septa cytoplasm flows from one cell to the next through?

pores


What are fungi cell walls called?

Sometimes the hyphae are divided into Compartments by cross walls called septa . Fungi with cross walls are called septate fungi, while fungi without cross walls are called coenocytic fungi.


How do fungi hyphae differ?

Yeasts are unicellular and don't form hyphae. If the environment is harsh they may form pseudohyphae. Molds usually form aseptate hyphae. Sometimes mold's sporangium can have a septa, which separates it form the rest of mycellium.


Is threadlike fungi unicellular?

Ascomycetes and Basidiomycetes are not. Filamentous chytrids and zygomycetes can be considered unicellular if there are no septa in their hyphae. For the most part, threadlike fungi are considered multicellular.


What characteristics determines that fungal hyphae are coenocytic?

If no crosswalls are present.