(Redirected from Fruiting bodies)
:'''Fruiting body' redirects here. This article is on the fruiting bodies of fungi. Multicellular spore-producing structures on fungus-like organisms, such as
slime molds, and some colonial bacteria, such as the
myxobacteria, are also called "fruiting bodies".''
In
fungi, the 'sporocarp' (also known as 'fruiting body') is a multicellular structure on which
spore-producing structures, such as
basidia or
asci, are borne. The fruiting body is part of the sexual phase of a fungal
life cycle, with the rest of the life cycle being characterized by
vegetative mycelial growth.
The sporocarp of a
basidiomycete is known as a '
basidiocarp', while the fruiting body of an
ascomycete is known as an '
ascocarp'. A significant range of different shapes and morphologies is found in both basidiocarps and ascocarps; these features play an important role in the identification and taxonomy of fungi.
Fruiting bodies are termed 'epigeous' if they grow on the ground, as with ordinary mushrooms, while ones which grow underground are 'hypogeous'. Epigeous sporocarps that are visible to the naked eye, especially fruiting bodies of a more or less
agaricoid morphology, are often referred to as
mushrooms, while hypogeous fungi are usually called
truffles or
false truffles. Truffles evolutionarily disposed with ability to disperse their spores via air currents, instead opting for animal consumption and subsequent dispersal of their spores.
In amateur
mushroom hunting, and to a large degree in academic
mycology as well, identification of higher fungi is based on the features of the sporocarp.