Some Zombie that lives in a cave
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The common Bread Mold Fungus
It remains dormant during unsuitable condition s
It is a rot causing fungus. Black spores are visible to the eye on the surface of the substrate, which may look like black specs. The interesting looking fungi can appear on stale bread, damp leathers, and decaying fruits.
Zygomycetes are fungi which can reproduce both sexually and asexually and are often a cause of food spoilage. Some examples of this type of fungi are dimargaris, dispira, spirodactylon and parasitella.
aspergillus - conidium. rhizopus - sporangium
There are many microscopic spores
It is known as Rhizopus.
The common Bread Mold Fungus
yes it does smell vagina
Rhizopus stolonifer is more commonly known as black bread mold. Rhizopus stolonifer is a part of the family Mucoraceae due to the key feature of a swollen extension of the sporangiophore. It looks like a balloon in the sporangium.
Rhizopus stolonifer is more commonly known as black bread mold. Rhizopus stolonifer is a part of the family Mucoraceae due to the key feature of a swollen extension of the sporangiophore. It looks like a balloon in the sporangium.
Rhizopus stolonifer
It remains dormant during unsuitable condition s
Bread mold belongs to the kingdom Fungi and is classified as belonging to the phylum Ascomycota. It is commonly of the genus Rhizopus.
Rhizopus Stolonifer is considered saprophytic Therefore , feeds on dead , damp and decaying matter such as
Some Zombie that lives in a cave
Rhizopus stolonifer (black bread mold) is a widely distributed thread-like Mucoralean mold. Commonly found on bread surfaces, it takes food and nutrients from the bread and causes damage to the surface where it lives.Asexual spores are formed within pinhead-like sporangia, which break to release the spores when mature. Germination of these spores forms the haploid hyphae of a new mycelium. R. stolonifer grows rapidly at temperatures between 15 and 30°C.[1]Rhizopus stolonifer is a heterothallic species (Schipper 1984), in that sexual reproduction happens only when opposite mating types (designated + and -) come in contact. Successful mating results in the formation of durable zygospores at the point of contact. Subsequently, the zygospore germinates and forms a sporangiophore whose sporangium contains both + and - haploid spores. There are two varieties: R. stolonifer var. stolonifer produces straight, erect sporangiophores, whereas those of R. stolonifer var. lyococcos are curved.[1] A closely related species, Rhizopus sexualis, differs primarily in being homothallic (self-compatible).