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ascomycete
[ as-kuh-mahy-seet, -mahy-seet ]
noun
, Mycology.
- any fungus of the phylum Ascomycota (or class Ascomycetes), including the molds and truffles, characterized by bearing the sexual spores in a sac (as distinguished from basidiomycete ).
ascomycete
/ ˌæskəmaɪˈsiːt /
noun
- any fungus of the phylum Ascomycota (formerly class Ascomycetes ) in which the spores (ascospores) are formed inside a club-shaped cell (ascus). The group includes yeast, penicillium, aspergillus, truffles, and certain mildews
ascomycete
/ ăs′kō-mī′sēt′ /
- Any of various fungi belonging to the phylum Ascomycota, characterized by the presence of sexually produced spores formed within an ascus. Like most fungi, ascomycetes also reproduce asexually by the formation of nonsexual spores called conidia at the ends of filaments known as hyphae. Yeasts, many molds that cause food spoilage, and the edible fungi known as morels and truffles, are ascomycetes. A number of serious plant diseases, including ergot, the powdery mildews that attack fruit, and Dutch elm disease, are also caused by ascomycetes.
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Derived Forms
- ˌascomyˈcetous, adjective
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Word History and Origins
Origin of ascomycete1
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Example Sentences
The plague that devastates humanity in “The Last of Us” can be traced back to a genus of ascomycete fungi known as cordyceps, which infects people’s brains, turning them into ferocious monsters.
From New York Times
A classic ascus is sausage-shaped, like this one, which belongs to a tasty morel mushroom, a type of large ascomycete with a compound cup head.
From Scientific American
That matters little for the fungus, but it mattered a great deal to some famous biologists who saw in the ascomycete Neurospora crassa a golden opportunity.
From Scientific American
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