| 31. | Ascospores infect directly, while the infected plant tissue produces acervuli which produces masses of conidia on conidiophores.
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| 32. | Colonies on CY20S agar have microcolonies up to 10 mm in diameter, but conidiophores are poorly formed.
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| 33. | The conidiophore is also known to occasionally branch into 1-3 sections each bearing its own conidium.
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| 34. | Members of the genus " Chrysosporium " differ in having larger conidia and acutely branched conidiophores.
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| 35. | Each conidiophore gives rise to three to five phialides, where chains of lemon-shaped conidia are formed.
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| 36. | Conidiophores grow as long as 170 �m in length with a swollen apex and one to three transverse septa.
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| 37. | Conidiophores arise from surface or aerial hyphae with the stipe's length ranging from 150-300 �m.
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| 38. | Microscopically, " Gliocladium " species produces hyphae, conidiophores, and conidia borne from hyaline phialides.
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| 39. | Conidiophores of " T . roseum " are usually erect and are 200-300?m in length.
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| 40. | It is the conidia and the conidiophores that cause the white, downy growth on the undersides of the leaves.
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