. Introduction to the study of fungi, their organography, classification, and distribution for the use of collectors . THE CARPOPHORE. according to the different genera. In certain cases, as inAspcrcjillus and Iiho2)alomyccs, tliey are simple and unbranchedup to the top (Fig. 7), but in the hirger number of genera theyare branched in the upper portion. Very often a greatnumber of these car-pophores are producedin a large woolly-looking patch, notrarely for an inch ortwo in length. Endo-genous moulds, whichproduce mycelium inthe interior of thetissues, send up littletufts of carpophoresthrough


. Introduction to the study of fungi, their organography, classification, and distribution for the use of collectors . THE CARPOPHORE. according to the different genera. In certain cases, as inAspcrcjillus and Iiho2)alomyccs, tliey are simple and unbranchedup to the top (Fig. 7), but in the hirger number of genera theyare branched in the upper portion. Very often a greatnumber of these car-pophores are producedin a large woolly-looking patch, notrarely for an inch ortwo in length. Endo-genous moulds, whichproduce mycelium inthe interior of thetissues, send up littletufts of carpophoresthrough the stomata,and these grow inpatches. Well-knownexamples are to befound in the genusPeroiiospora, such asthe mould on parsnips and onions ( the mycelium is internal, and the conidiophores passin the same manner out into the atmosphere; but they areusually short, often unbranched, with a single conidium. InOidium the mycelium is external, and the erect hyphae aresimple, but it is only the short lower portion which is truly acarpophore, for the upper portion is constricted successively,and the joints fall off as they


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Keywords: ., bookauthorcookemcm, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookyear1895