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130 CHAPTER 7

Fig. 7.8Part of a wooden door post heavily rotted by
Serpula lacrymans. The surface of the timber is covered with
dense yellow/white mycelial fronds of the fungus. The wood
shows the characteristic block-like cracking (arrowheads)
typical of dry rot.


Fig. 7.9Mycelial cords and fans of hyphae produced
by a mycorrhizal fungus, Lactarius pubescens, on an agar
plate.

Fig. 7.10Mycorrhizas of Basidiomycota
on a tree root. The narrow roots are
enclosed in a dense fungal sheath.

Similar mycelial cords and fans of hyphae are seen
in many ectomycorrhizal fungi of forest trees (Fig. 7.9),
where they are responsible both for the spread of myc-
orrhizal development and for capturing mineral nutri-
ents and translocating them back to the root system.
The “fungal carbohydrates” are also implicated in
many plant-parasitic and symbiotic associations. The
initial studies on this were made by Harley with the
ectomycorrhizal fungi of beech trees. These fungi pro-
duce a substantial sheath of tissue around the root tips
(Fig. 7.10), and this sheath can be dissected away for
separate chemical analysis. When the leaves of tree
seedlings were exposed to^14 CO 2 , the label was found
mainly as sucrose in the leaf, stem, and root tissues,
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