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explain the penicillium - fungiclassificationkingdom - mycetaedivision - amastigomycotaclass - ascomycetessubclass - plectomycetidaeorder -
explain some features of aspergillusthe identifying features include1 macroscopically aspergillus colonies are powdery and are of different colours
explain aspergillus - fungiclassificationkingdom - mycetaedivision - amastigomycotaclass - ascomycetessubclass - plectomycetidaeorder -
q what do you understand by taxonomytaxonomy is dependent on many sciences and they in turn are equally dependent on it the activities of a
q whcih group of individual animals and plants called speciesa group of individual plants and animals that are fundamentally alike is treated as a
q what do you mean by generalike species the genus represents a concept genera plural are aggregates of closely related species there is no size
q rules of nomenclature classificationthe rules of nomenclature prescribed the categories into which plants should be classified these categories
q what do you mean by linnaeus binomial systemalmost a century after bauhin the great swiss naturalist carolus linnaeus 1707-1778 published the two
q can you explain bauhinwe got the first reference of binary use of species name in pinax 1623 a publication of a swiss physician and botanist casper
q what do you mean by binomial system in binomial nomenclaturein the previous sections we have outlined the concepts of binomial nomenclature at
q illustrate the important rules of nomenclaturenomenclature is allied to taxonomy as it deals with the determination of the correct name to be
q principles of binomial nomenclaturethere are certain basic principles of binomial nomenclature which are as followsi different nomenclatural
q international codes used for system of binomial nomenclaturein 1753 linnaeus suggested a system of binomial nomenclature where each individual is
q what do you mean by binomial nomenclaturebinomial nomenclature is the naming of the individual entity and the group so produced through
explain some characteristic features of mucor1 stolons characteristics of rhizopus are absent in mucor the aerial mycelium in mucor consists of
explain about the mucor - fungimucor is present as a food contaminant it resembles rhizopus in life history and colonies appear just like
how the rhizopus reproducerhizopus usually reproduce asexually but under unfavourable conditions sexual reproduction isogamous occur resulting in
explain the sporangiophores features of rhizopus1 sporangiophores swell at the tip into a spherical knob like structure called sporangium it has two
define sporangiophore - types of hyphaesporangiophore - tufts of special erect unbranched hyphae growing in air arise from stolon just opposite to
define rhizoids - types of hyphaerhizoids - these are brown slender root like structures which arise in cluster from each node of the stolon these
define stolon - types of hyphaemicroscopically hyphae are aseptate and coenocytic there are 3 kinds of hyphaea stolon - these grow horizontally on
explain identifying features of rhizopusmacroscopically rhizopus appears as a white cottony mass look at rhizopus growth on media above growing
what is rhizopus - fungirhizopus is a common laboratory contaminant it is a spoiling mould and found frequently on the surface of bread fruits and
explain the nutrition of fungifungi grow in moist environment and are chemoorganoheterotrophs what do we mean by chemoorganoheterotrophs the term
explain about the reproduction in fungifungi we have seen above reproduce both sexually and asexually asexual mode of reproduction include budding