| 11. | The hymenium covers the sides of the basidiocarps, each basidium producing and forcibly discharging only two basidiospores.
|
| 12. | The basidiocarp is perennial and the top layer will form layering edges that are dark yellow to brown.
|
| 13. | Basidiocarps ( fruit bodies ) are produced on soil and litter, sometimes partly encrusting stems of living plants.
|
| 14. | The fruit bodies ( basidiocarps ) of " H . occidentale " are its most identifying feature.
|
| 15. | Basidiocarps tend to form near the forest floor of affected trees and may be hidden in the forest duff.
|
| 16. | A basidiocarp is formed in which club-like structures known as basidia generate haploid basidiospores after karyogamy and meiosis.
|
| 17. | The most commonly known basidiocarps are mushrooms, but they may also take other forms ( see Morphology section ).
|
| 18. | Basidiocarps are Gills are well-developed and radiate outwards from an off-center point of origin or lacking.
|
| 19. | Schematic of a typical basidiocarp, the dipoid reproductive structure of a basidiomycete, showing fruiting body, hymenium and basidia.
|
| 20. | Basidiocarps ( fruit bodies ), when produced, are gelatinous and are colloquially classed among the " jelly fungi ".
|