Home (Hyphae)
Home  
 
 
Home » Gardening » Hyphae


 

Hyphae

Gardening HyphaHypocotyl

hypha (pl. hyphae)
The microscopic, multicellular, nonphotosynthetic filaments of fungi and seaweeds.
GardenWeb Glossary of Botanical Terms
New Search: ...

 


hypha (plural: hyphae). One of the filaments forming the body, or mycelium, of a fungus.
hypocotyl. The portion of an embryo or seedling between the cotyledons and the developing root tip.
I ...

The bodies of the fungi, called hyphae, live on or in the tissues of plants, and make nutrients available for the plants to absorb. The plants provide the fungi with amino acids and other complex compounds.

Hyphae, small threadlike structures, grow from the fungi into the coating and wood substrate, essentially opening the substrate and making it more porous, thus prone to moisture.

mycelia Masses of fungal threads (hyphae) that make up the vegetative body of the fungus.
mycology The study of fungi.
mycoplasma See phytoplasma.

hypha -- n.Threadlike filaments that form the mycelium (body) of a fungus; hyphae- pl.
inflorescence -- A cluster of flowers.
internode -- The region of a stem between two nodes, when there is no branching of the vascular tissue.

Right: A microscopic view of NRS fungal hyphae on root of turfgrass
Photographs: Judy Sedbrook ...

Good garden soil is full of life
One teaspoon of good garden soil can contain up to one billion bacteria, several yards of fungal hyphae (fungal feeder roots), thousands of protozoa and dozens of nematodes and arthropods.

The affected leaves often remain matted together by the fungus´s web-like growth (hyphae) that holds the brown leaves within the canopy. As the temperature cools in the fall, the fungus stops growing and the matted leaves drop from the plant.

The fungi colonize plant roots and, in effect, quickly create masses of new "fungus roots" that dramatically increase the plant's ability to absorb water and nutrients and fight off disease. Fine strands called hyphae penetrate soil particles that ...

See also: Hypha, Plant, Fungi, Fungus, Produce

Gardening HyphaHypocotyl

 
 rssRSS