Stemonitis species Burmese amber Fig2
![Image of amoeboid protists](https://beta-repo.eol.org/data/media/db/fe/1f/509.696924b450f5f222b5a709c4d235e6b7.580x360.jpg)
Description:
Summary[edit] Description: English: Fossil Stemonitis in mid-Cretaceous amber from northern Myanmar. (a) General habitus of sporocarps. (b) Surface of sporotheca, showing details of capillitium. (c) Base of sporotheca, showing stalk continuing as a columella into the sporotheca. (d) Detached spores. Scale bars 200 µm in (a). 20 µm in (b), 10 µm in (c), and 5 µm in (d). Date: 24 December 2019. Source: Rikkinen, J.; Grimaldi, D. A.; & Schmidt, A. R. (2019). "Morphological stasis in the first myxomycete from the Mesozoic, and the likely role of cryptobiosis". Scientific Reports 9 (1): 19730. DOI:10.1038/s41598-019-55622-9. PMID 31874965. PMC: 6930221. ISSN 2045-2322. Author: Rikkinen, Grimaldi, & Schmidt, 2019.
Included On The Following Pages:
- Life
- Cellular
- Eukaryota (eukaryotes)
- Amoebozoa (amoeboid protists)
- NO NAME!
- Eumycetozoa (slime molds)
- Myxogastria (plasmodial slime molds)
- Stemonitida
- Stemonitidae
- Stemonitis
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- Rikkinen, Grimaldi, & Schmidt, 2019
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- Rikkinen, Grimaldi, & Schmidt, 2019
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- Rikkinen, J.; Grimaldi, D. A.; & Schmidt, A. R. (2019). "Morphological stasis in the first myxomycete from the Mesozoic, and the likely role of cryptobiosis". Scientific Reports 9 (1): 19730. DOI:10.1038/s41598-019-55622-9. PMID 31874965. PMC: 6930221. ISSN 2045-2322.
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