131
Figure 81.
Neotestudina rosati mycelium has the potential to be pathogenic to humans.
The fungus enters the
body through a cut or scrape and causes a mycetoma, a chronic subcutaneous infection
56
.
Most fungal hyphae are divided into distinct cells by end walls known as septa (singular,
septum). Tiny holes in the septa of most fungi divisions (like plants, fungal phyla are called divisions
by tradition) allow for the rapid flow of nutrients and small molecules
from cell to cell along the
hyphae. They are known as perforated septa. Septa do not separate the hyphae in bread molds (which
belong to the division Zygomycota). They are made up of large cells with numerous nuclei, an
arrangement known as coenocytic hyphae
57
.
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