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PHOTO GALLERY
>DIEHARD™ Mycorrhizal Inoculants>Photo Gallery>Photos of Mycorrhiza

Piloderma croceum on spruce

Piloderma croceum on spruce
Dr. S. Raidl, Mycology, University of Munich
Used with permission

Rhizopogon roseolus on spruce
Dr. S. Raidl, Mycology, University of Munich
Used with permission
Rhizopogon roseolus on spruce

Tomentellopsis submollis with spruce

Tomentellopsis submollis with spruce
Dr. S. Raidl, Mycology, University of Munich
Used with permission

Arbuscule in a root fluorescing

Arbuscule in a root fluorescing from 
antibodies with a specific fluorescent 
tag that binds specifically with glomalin, 
the iron-containing glycoprotein produced 
abundantly by fungal hyphae that aids 
considerably in soil aggregation.
Used with permission 
Dr. Joseph Morton, West Virginia University

Collage showing typical spores mounted 
in an iodine reagent that stains certain 
wall layers dark purple (much like what 
happens with starch in plant cells) as well 
as typical mycorrhizae. Top left: Glomus 
clarum spore; top right: Scutellospora 
pellucida spore; bottom left: G. clarum 
mycorrhizae;
bottom right: S. pellucida 
mycorrhizae in roots and auxiliary cells 
that form outside the roots.

Used with permission 
Dr. Joseph Morton, West Virginia University

Collage showing typical spores

Collage of fungal species separated from
the mixture in the center to establish in 
pure cultures, all of which sporulated in 
a single trap culture of a soil in a North 
Carolina old field. 
Used with permission 
Dr. Joseph Morton, West Virginia University

Glomus intraradices sporulating in roots.  In the photo there
are HUNDREDS of spores inside the roots.  The roots actually protect the spores and give them longer life and viability. 
Hundreds of spores INSIDE root fragments.   
Used with permission 
Dr. Joseph Morton, West Virginia University

Glomus intraradices sporulating in roots

Glomus deserticola
Used with permission
Dr. Robert Auge, University of Tennessee,
Knoxville, Tennessee

Glomus deserticola
Root hyphae

Root hyphae
Used with permission 
Dr. David Sylvia, University of Florida

Penetration
Used with permission 
Dr. David Sylvia, University of Florida

Penetration
Penetration

Root Colonization
|Used with permission 
Dr. David Sylvia, University of Florida

Ectomycorrhizae

Ectomycorrhizae
 

 

 

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