id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 30181 Cooke, M. C. (Mordecai Cubitt) Fungi: Their Nature and Uses .txt text/plain 107622 6838 68 The parasitism of numerous minute species on living and growing plants parasitic on growing plants, but the spores are usually black or sub-globose bodies, forming a kind of compound spore. often formed into cells through partitions in order to produce spores, _spore_ is limited in fungi to such germ-cells as are not produced in true perithecium, but the spores are produced in like manner upon a kind higher fungi; but there will remain a very large number of species though very common in Europe, is not eaten, yet it is included by Dr. Curtis with the esculent species of the United States. into account the large number of species of fungi, probably scarcely species produce minute zoospores from the so-called spores. 107, 108) of the cells and spores of both species are the lowest form which ascomycetous fungi assume, and the species are these forms of _Sclerotium_ will develop the peculiar species of ./cache/30181.txt ./txt/30181.txt