The sexual spores in Penicillium are called ascospores. They are produced within a sac-like structure called an ascus during sexual reproduction.
Sporophytes.
Fungi, ferns, horsetails, liverworts, hornworts, and mosses.
Fungi produce spores through sexual reproduction, where two different mating strains combine genetic material to form spores, and asexual reproduction, where spores are formed through mitosis without the need for mating.
The ability to undergo meiosis and produce genetic variation does not apply equally well to both sexual and asexual spores. Sexual spores are formed through meiosis, which shuffles genetic material and leads to genetic variation. Asexual spores, on the other hand, are produced by mitosis and do not contribute to genetic diversity.
spores
No, spores are produced when conditions are favourable for the growth of the fungus. Sexual reproduction usually occurs if the organism senses that its spores will not have a substrate to grow on.
Yes, fungal spores are produced through both sexual and asexual reproduction. In sexual reproduction, fungal spores are indeed haploid and formed through meiosis, which results in genetic variation among spores.
Sporophytes.
Corn, an angiosperm, reproduces by seeds instead of spores. This is a form of sexual reproduction. No angiosperm reproduces with spores.
Fungi, ferns, horsetails, liverworts, hornworts, and mosses.
sporangia.
Fungi produce spores through sexual reproduction, where two different mating strains combine genetic material to form spores, and asexual reproduction, where spores are formed through mitosis without the need for mating.
pencillium roqueforti
spores
The ability to undergo meiosis and produce genetic variation does not apply equally well to both sexual and asexual spores. Sexual spores are formed through meiosis, which shuffles genetic material and leads to genetic variation. Asexual spores, on the other hand, are produced by mitosis and do not contribute to genetic diversity.
The types of sexual spores in fungi include zygospores, ascospores, and basidiospores. Zygospores result from the fusion of two haploid cells, ascospores are enclosed in a sac-like structure called an ascus, and basidiospores are produced externally on a basidium.
1. Zygomycetes: common in bread mould reproduses asexually unless conditions are poor the sexual reproduction occurs between mating strains 2. Ascomycetes: yeasts are unicellular cause mildew on plant leaves produse sexual spores called ascospores, and are mostly red brown blue green moulds that cause food spoilage 3. Basidiomycetes: known as club fungi, including mushroom some of which are edible other are poisenous or halloucinogens. Pproduce sexual spores called basidiospores 4. Deuteromycetes: known as fungi imperfecti either lost capacity for sexual production or has never been observed eg pencillium antibiotics, cheese aromas.