spore
Biology
Microbiology
Examples of spore in the following topics:
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Fungi Reproduction
- Fungal spores are smaller and lighter than plant seeds.
- The giant puffball mushroom bursts open and releases trillions of spores.
- There are many types of asexual spores.
- Other asexual spores originate in the fragmentation of a hypha to form single cells that are released as spores; some of these have a thick wall surrounding the fragment.
- At this stage, spores are disseminated into the environment.
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Sporophytes and Gametophytes in Seedless Plants
- Sporophytes (2n) undergo meiosis to produce spores that develop into gametophytes (1n) which undergo mitosis.
- The term "sporangia" literally means "spore in a vessel": it is a reproductive sac that contains spores.
- The spores are later released by the sporangia and disperse in the environment.
- Seedless, non-vascular plants produce only one kind of spore and are called homosporous.
- In contrast, heterosporous plants produce two morphologically different types of spores .
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Firmicutes
- The name "endospore" is suggestive of a spore or seed-like form (endo means within), but it is not a true spore (i.e. not an offspring).
- The cortex lies beneath the spore coat and consists of peptidoglycan.
- The core contains the spore chromosomal DNA which is encased in chromatin-like proteins known as SASPs (small acid-soluble spore proteins), that protect the spore DNA from UV radiation and heat.
- The DNA is replicated and a membrane wall, known as a spore septum, begins to form between it and the rest of the cell.
- The oval, unstained structures are spores.
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Liverworts and Hornworts
- The spore-producing cells undergo meiosis to form spores, which disperse (with the help of elaters), giving rise to new gametophytes.
- The haploid spores germinate and produce the next generation of gametophytes .
- Spores are released from sporophytes and form the gametophyte.
- This sporophyte disperses spores with the help of elaters; the process begins again.
- Liverworts also disperse their spores with the help of elaters, while hornworts utilize pseudoelaters to aid in spore dispersal.
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Life Cycles of Sexually Reproducing Organisms
- The zygote immediately undergoes meiosis to form four haploid cells called spores.
- The spores can remain dormant for various time periods.
- The spores will subsequently develop into the gametophytes .
- The zygote undergoes meiosis to produce haploid spores.
- Each spore gives rise to a multicellular haploid organism by mitosis.
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Anthrax
- Anthrax commonly infects wild and domesticated herbivorous mammals that ingest or inhale the spores while grazing.
- Humans become infected through contact with the anthrax spores from infected animals.
- By inhaling contaminated air containing anthrax spores.
- By handling infected animals and/or animal products, antrax spores can enter through cuts in the skin.
- By eating undercooked meat containing anthrax spores.
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Protist Life Cycles and Habitats
- Meiosis produces haploid spores within the sporangia.
- Spores disseminate through the air or water to potentially land in more favorable environments.
- Cells atop the stalk form an asexual fruiting body that contains haploid spores.
- As with plasmodial slime molds, the spores are disseminated and can germinate if they land in a moist environment.
- The sporangium forms haploid spores through meiosis, after which the spores disseminate, germinate, and begin the life cycle anew.
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Zygomycota: The Conjugated Fungi
- The black tips of bread mold, Rhizopus stolonifer, are the swollen sporangia packed with black spores .
- When spores land on a suitable substrate, they germinate and produce a new mycelium.
- When the zygospore germinates, it undergoes meiosis and produces haploid spores, which will, in turn, grow into a new organism.
- The (b) tips of bread mold are the spore-containing sporangia.
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Seedless Vascular Plants
- Seedless vascular plants, which reproduce and spread through spores, are plants that contain vascular tissue, but do not flower or seed.
- In seedless vascular plants, such as ferns and horsetails, the plants reproduce using haploid, unicellular spores instead of seeds.
- The spores are very lightweight (unlike many seeds), which allows for their easy dispersion in the wind and for the plants to spread to new habitats.
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High Pressure
- The frist reports showed that bacterial spores were not always inactivated by pressure, while vegetative bacteria were usually killed.
- Around 1970, researchers renewed their efforts in studying bacterial spores after it was discovered that using moderate pressures was more effective than using higher pressures.
- These spores, which caused a lack of preservation in the earlier experiments, were inactivated faster by moderate pressure, but in a manner different from what occurred with vegetative microbes.
- When subjected to moderate pressures, bacterial spores germinate, and the resulting spores are easily killed using pressure, heat, or ionizing radiation.