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A basidium(pl., basidia) is a microscopic, spore-producing structure found on the hymenophore of fruiting bodies of basidiomycete fungi.
The Basidiomycetes or the Ascomycetes are 2 main groups of fungi .In the Basidiomycetes, the spores are produced externally, on the end of specialised cells called basidia.In Ascomycetes, spores are produced internally, inside a sac called an ascus.Asci and basidia are both microscopic structures.Spores are produced by meiosis .BasidiomycetesAscomycetesFungi with spores produced externally, on specialised cells called basidia.Typically, there are 4 spores per basidium .Fungi with spores produced inside a sac called an ascus.Each ascus usually contains 8 spores produced by meiosis followed by mitosis .
The gills of a mushroom house the basidia, the cells on which the spores are produced. The gills function as a large surface area over which to produce millions of spores that is exposed air yet protected from large fluctuations in air temperature, moisture, etc.
Mushrooms are from the phylum "Dikarya," as referred to on wikipedia, or as I refer to them in the more commonly used way, "Holobasidiomycetes," which means "All fungi with Basidia." Basidia are practically spore holders on the hymenophore (The place where the spores are held, whether be gills, pores, teeth, etc.) of a mushroom which have a specific shape that make the mushrooms with them so-called "True Mushrooms." "Holo" pronounced "Hollow" means "All" and "Mycetes," which sounds exactly like "My keys," except that there's a "T" after "Y" means "Fungi."
Mosses reproduce by spores.
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Spores are produced by fungi, bacteria, and green plants. Spores in mushrooms are produced on special cells called basidia.
Spores are produced by fungi, bacteria, and green plants. Spores in mushrooms are produced on special cells called basidia.
Spores are produced by fungi, bacteria, and green plants. Spores in mushrooms are produced on special cells called basidia.
Club fungi reproduce asexually. This means they do not need a male to reproduce. They form spores on the basidia and these spores grow.
basidia are club shaped hyphae of basidiomycete fungi that produce spores and basidiospore is a spore produced in the basidia of basidiomycetes during sexual reproduction
The gills of a mushroom contain reproductive basidia. Within the basidia, a zygote is formed. The zygote then unergoes meiosis, (and the cycle begins again). Basically they produce spores, and hold up the cap of a mushroom!:) <3 Gina Schriefer
A basidium(pl., basidia) is a microscopic, spore-producing structure found on the hymenophore of fruiting bodies of basidiomycete fungi.
Club fungi produce sexual spores in a club-shaped structure. This is known as basidia and is closely related to sac fungi.
It is often referred to as "club fungi", all members of this Phylum form spores on club-shaped cells known as basidia. Mushrooms are the most common examples of the members in this phylum. :)
The Basidiomycetes or the Ascomycetes are 2 main groups of fungi .In the Basidiomycetes, the spores are produced externally, on the end of specialised cells called basidia.In Ascomycetes, spores are produced internally, inside a sac called an ascus.Asci and basidia are both microscopic structures.Spores are produced by meiosis .BasidiomycetesAscomycetesFungi with spores produced externally, on specialised cells called basidia.Typically, there are 4 spores per basidium .Fungi with spores produced inside a sac called an ascus.Each ascus usually contains 8 spores produced by meiosis followed by mitosis .
The umbrella-shaped mushrooms are the most familiar fungi. Mushrooms belong to a group of fungi called club fungi. This group gets its name from structures that the fungi grow during reproduction. Club fungi reproduce sexually. During reproduction, they grow special hyphae that form clublike structures. These structures are called basidia (buh SID ee uh), the Greek word for "clubs." Sexual spores develop on the basidia.Shortened Answer: Basidia