Ascomycota. Ascomycete . Ascomycotas . Sclerotinias . Ascomycetes . Cochliobolus . Sclerotinia . A phylum of fungi which have cross-walls or septa in the mycelium. The perfect state is characterized by the formation of a saclike cell (ascus) containing ascospores. Most pathogenic fungi with a known perfect state belong to this phylum. . 1.00
Mitosporic Fungi. Deuteromycete . Deuteromycotas . Fungi imperfectus . Fungus, Mitosporic . Hyphomycete . Mitosporic Fungus . imperfectus, Fungi . Deuteromycetes . Deuteromycota . Fungi imperfecti . Fungi, Mitosporic . Hyphomycetes . A large and heterogenous group of fungi whose common characteristic is the absence of a sexual state. Many of the pathogenic fungi in humans belong to this group. . 0.37
Chytridiomycota. Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis . Mastigomycotina . A phylum of fungi that was formerly considered a subdivision of Phycomycetes. They are the only fungi that produce motile spores (zoospores) at some stage in their life cycle. Most are saprobes but they also include examples of plant, animal, and fungal pathogens. . 0.34
Phyllachorales. Glomerellas . Phyllachorale . Glomerella . An order of fungi in the phylum ASCOMYCOTA characterized by stromatic perithecial forms in most species. Notable genera are Magnaporthe and Glomerella, the latter having the anamorph (mitosporic form) COLLETOTRICHUM. . 0.32
Dipodascus. A genus of ascomycetous yeast in the family Dipodascaceae, order SACCHAROMYCETALES. It is characterized by asci which have persistent walls and by smooth-walled ascospores. Anamorphs are in the genus GEOTRICHUM. . 0.32
Eurotiales. Eurotiale . An order of fungi in the phylum ASCOMYCOTA characterized by the presence of well defined peridia and cleistothecial asci. Notable anamorphs (mitosporic forms) of Eurotiales include PENICILLIUM and ASPERGILLUS. . 0.31