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COLOR: Pale
orange-brown (0-20-80-0) to dark orange-brown (0-50-100-0), with most of intermediate
color (0-40-100-0).
SHAPE:
Globose, subglobose.

SIZE DISTRIBUTION:
120-180 µm, mean
= 149.3 µm (n=120).
SPORE WALL: Three layers (L1, L2, and L3), the outer one continous with the wall of the neck of the parent sporiferous saccule (left photo) and the latter two being synthesized as soon as the spore wall begins to form (right photo).
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L1: Hyaline,
0.6-1.6 µm thick, degrading and sloughing early in spore wall differentiation
and thus often are absent even before ornamentations on the laminate layer (L2
below) are fully formed. When present, usually adherent to developing ornamentations
of L2.
L2: Originates as a single layer 0.6-0.8 µm thick with stubby
yellow-brown (0-20-100-0) "knobs" attached that are 2.2-2.6 µm wide
and 3.0-3.2 µm long (the width of the spore wall at this juncture). Circular
to oblong projections arise from the "knobs" and have a smooth outer
edge or form a polygon of six sides. Circular projections are 4.2-6.8 µm wide
(most 4-5 µm), whereas oblong projections can be as long as 9 µm. Each projection
has a center cavity, 1.25-2.6 µm wide and 0.6-1.5 µm deep surrounded by a lip
1.25-1.5 µm wide. This layer is organized differently from a laminate layer
in that it has a basal sublayer and the remaining structure results from organization
of the ornamentations. Composite thickness ranges from 2.8-8.6 µm. At maturity,
the pore between spore and saccule neck is closed by thickening of the sublayer
(minus dentations) and becomes an "endospore" (completely enclosing
the spore contents).
L3: A single hyaline layer, rarely thicher than 0.8 µm, which is detectable only when it separates from the spore wall. In vigorously crushed spores, this layer separates enough from the spore wall to appear as a separate flexible inner wall. It is not treated as one (despite similarity in appearance) because of close association with the spore wall analagous to a layer of similar position in many other Acaulospora species (e.g. A. scrobiculata, A. mellea, A. tuberculata).
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GERMINAL WALLS:
Two hyaline flexible
inner walls (gw1 and gw2) are synthesized sequentially after the spore wall
has completed differentiation.
GW1: Two layers are formed (L1 and L2). L1
is 0.4-0.6 µm thick and in close proximity usually to L2, which
is 1.2-1.4 µm thick. This wall usually is easy to see because it separates readily
from the spore wall and iw2.
GW2: Two adherent layers are formed (L1 and L2). L1
is 0.6-1.0 µm thick, with granular excresences (or "beads") that tend
to become dislodged and float away with applied pressure. These "beads"
are stabilized after preservation in formalin, but otherwise may be absent on
mounted spores within a few months of storage. L2 is plastic
enough that it has been termed "amorphous". It is 3-10 µm thick in
PVLG-based mountants, depending on amount of pressure applied to it while breaking
the spore; staining red-purple (20-80-20-0) to dark red-purple (40-80-60-0)
in Melzer's reagent.
SPORIFEROUS
SACCULECOLOR: Hyaline.
SHAPE:
Mostly globose (see
photos above).
SIZE DISTRIBUTION:
130-160 µm, mean
= 151 µm.
COMPOSITE WALL THICKNESS:
1.4-4.2 µm.
SACCULE WALL:
One layer, smooth
surface.
DISTANCE FROM SACCULE TO SPORE:
60-80 µm, rarely 100 µm.
Intraradical arbuscules tend to stain lightly in trypan blue, whereas intraradical hyphae and vesicles are more variable, from light to darkly stained. Hyphae are coiled mostly near entry points, 3-6 µm in diameter; otherwise thinner (2-4 µm) and usually growing parallel to each other and interconnecting via branches that form "H" and "h" connections. Vesicles often are localized in clusters that are patchily distributed along a mycorrhiza. Many appear to form near entry points (primary or secondary ingress) and many are lobed or irregularly-shaped.
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An ovoid "germination orb" is presumed to form on gw2 like that found in other Acaulospora species, but it has not yet been observed in specimens examined.
Immature spores and saccules are the same salmon color (0-20-60-0). Differentiation of dentations is almost completed before contents of the saccule are emptied and always before the saccule has detached.