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COLOR: Pale
straw (0-10-10-0) to orange brown (0-20-40-0), the former predominant in a healthy
culture, the latter more common in old cultures and field collections.

SHAPE:
Globose, subglobose.
SIZE DISTRIBUTION:
220-360 µm, mean = 308 µm
(n = 74).
SPORE WALL: Two
layers (L1 and L2) that are adherent that in juvenile spores are of equal thickness,
with the laminate layer thickening as the spore wall is differentiated.
L1:
An outer permanent rigid layer, yellow-brown (0-20-100-0), 0.7-1.8
m thick, tightly adherent to L2 . The surface of this layer consists of tightly
packed warts less than one micrometer apart, 0.5-1.0 µm wide and 0.5-1.2 µm
high.
L2: A layer consisting of pale yellow-brown (0-10-40-0) to
yellow-brown (0-10-80-0) sublayers (or laminae); 6.2-8.4 µm (mean of 7.6 µm).
They stain orange-brown (0-40-100-0) to red-brown (0-60-80-0) in Melzer's reagent.
GERMINAL
WALLS: One (gw1) formed independent of the spore wall and subtending
hypha, consisting of two thin, often adherent layers.
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In PVLG
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In PVLG and Melzer's reagent
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GW1: Two
hyaline layers (L1 and L2) that in field-collected spores are so adherent that
they appear as one layer (the condition of type specimens used to describe the
species). In spores from pot cultures, the outer layer often separates in small
folds from parts of the wall giving the wall a blistered appearance.
L1: A thin layer less than 0.5 µm thick and thus difficult
to resolve without differential interference optics. No reaction in Melzer's
reagent.
L2: A slightly thicker layer, 0.6-1.2 µm thick. No reaction
in Melzer's reagent.
WIDTH OF SPOROGENOUS CELL:
52-60 µm (mean = 54.9 µm)
SPOROGENOUS CELL WALL:
Two hyaline layers (L1 and L2) probably are present (continuous with
the two layers of the spore wall), but only L2 is readily discernible at the
level of the compound microscope.
L2: Yellow-brown (0-10-80-0), 4.6-8.0 µm thick near the spore
and then thinning to 1.4-1.6 µm beyond the sporogenous cell.
OCCLUSION:
Closure by a plug concolorous with the laminate layer of the spore wall.
COLOR: Hyaline
to pale yellow (0-10-20-0).
SHAPE: Ovoid,
with length approximately 1.5 times that of the width. Margins of the shield
with many convolutions that appear as deep warts when viewed from the side.
It also has a rugose appearance in plan view that contribute to the warty surface
in longitudinal view. Position of the shield is between the spore and germinal
inner wall.
SIZE: One intact shield measured 69 x 114 µm.
Cells in aggregates of 5-13 (mean = 8), subglobose, ovoid to clavate, borne on coiled hyaline hyphae, thin-walled (< 1 µm thick), pale cream (0-0-10-0) in transmitted light, each cell with knobby swellings 1-5 µm high and 3-10 µm wide
Arbuscular hyphae branch to form many fine tips from a swollen basal hypha. Intraradical hyphae 3-9 µm wide, with knobs, projections and swollen areas (up to 12 µm wide), and usually densely coiled near entry points and in outer cortical cells.
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Arbuscules in corn roots
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Entry point and other mycorrhizal structures
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Extraradical hyphae of two morphological types: one wide (3-7 µm) and the other thinner (1.5-2 .0 µm). The former usually is the infective hyphae at entry points and forms knobby swellings there and near auxiliary cells. Intraradical arbuscules and hyphae consistently stain darkly in roots treated with trypan blue.