Hyphae that lack a cross wall are called Coenocytic
Whereas those that contain a cross wall are called Septate
Coenocytic
for plato users, its septa
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.
Hyphae are divided into cells by internal cross-walls in most fungai. These are called septate hyphae. The cells that are not divided are called aseptate.
Hyphae are divided into cells by internal cross-walls in most fungai. These are called septate hyphae. The cells that are not divided are called aseptate.
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.
septa
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.
for plato users, its septa
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.
Hyphae are divided into cells by internal cross-walls in most fungai. These are called septate hyphae. The cells that are not divided are called aseptate.
Hyphae are divided into cells by internal cross-walls in most fungai. These are called septate hyphae. The cells that are not divided are called aseptate.
In both the Ascomycota and basidiomycota, the nuclei are separated by cross walls or septate hyphae.
cross walls divide the hypha into cells containing one or two nuclei.
Septate hyphae are composed of individual cells separated from one another by cell walls. Nonseptate hyphae look like one big cell! There are no walls, and the nuclei are spread throughout the hypha.
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.
Fungi all have chitin in their cell walls, plate-like cisternae in their mitochondria, and a Spitzenkorper in their hyphae (if they have hyphae). Fungi also synthesize lysine using the AAA pathway and store energy as glycogen.
No, hyphae are a characteristic of fungi