Respuesta :
A fertile hypha that bears spores is called a sporangiophore.
Answer:
conidiophore
Explanation:
Similar to a conidiogenic cell (a cell that produces conidia), although this term is generally used to refer to a short or diverse branched hyphane that carries one or more conidiogenic cells.
In general, members of the ‘philum’ Ascomycota grow easily in crops and cover a wide range of livelihoods, there are saprobes, symbionts, parasites or pathogens. They produce ascospores in the teleomorphic state and conidia in the anamorphic. Molds with hyaline and dematia conidia are often called moniliaceae if they have conidia or dark mycelia.
The conidiophores are isolated or gathered in coremios, sporodochs, acérvulas or pycnidia. There are two main mechanisms for spore production. In blastic conidiogenesis, young conidio is recognized before being separated by a wall. In thalamic conidiogenesis the separating wall is formed prior to the differentiation of the conidio. Once mature, the conidia exhibit schizolytic dehiscence when the parts of the double septum separate and rexolytic when the intermediate cell wall is broken.