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saprophyte

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saprophyte

any plant that lives and feeds on dead organic matter using mycorrhizal fungi associated with its roots; a saprotrophic plant
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

saprophyte

[′sap·rə‚fīt]
(botany)
A plant that lives on decaying organic matter.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Saprophyte

 

a plant that feeds on the organic matter of dead organisms or on the excrement of living organisms. Their type of feeding places saprophytes in the group of heterotrophic organisms. Saprophytes and autotrophic organisms play an important role in the cycle of matter in nature; saprophytes promote the decomposition of carcasses and animal excrement into water, carbon dioxide, ammonia, and other inorganic compounds.

Saprophytes are found mainly among bacteria, actinomy-cetes, and fungi. Typical algal saprophytes are Polytoma of the family Chlamydomonadinaceae and Prototheca of the family Protococcales. Some saprophytes transfer to a parasitic mode of existence. A number of photosynthesizing organisms, such as some green algae, may also feed saprophytically.

Flowering plants of the families Pyrolaceae, Orchidaceae, and Burmanniaceae are sometimes considered as saprophytes, but it is more accurate to regard them as mycotrophic parasitic plants. The plants receive nutrient matter from the soil via a mycorrhizal fungus, and they are also marked by photosynthesis.

E. S. TEREKHIN

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
Furthermore, it would seem from the current evidence discussed above that the absence of CaOx in soils and in the geological record is primarily as a result of the saprophytic use of oxalate as a source of energy and of C.
Research is continuing on topics such as the environmental conditions conducive to Pestalotiopsis, fungicides for control as well as other saprophytic and opportunistic pathogens not being controlled by current spray programs.
Statistical analysis: Data regarding number of pathogenic and saprophytic fungal colonies were analyzed by analysis of variance followed by LSD test (P[?]0.05) to separate treatment means using computer software Statistics 8.1.
Saprophytic fungi are unable to produce their own food and depend upon their enzymatic system, which breaks the complex biopolymers into simple nutritional components and subsequently absorbed from their surroundings (Alexopolous et al., 1996).
The primer set designed within the rrs gene encoding 16S rRNA is specific to saprophytic Leptospira [20].
Aspergillus spp are saprophytic fungi, but aspergillosis threatens patients who are immunocompromised, and fatal cases of aspergillosis increased after the introduction of corticosteroids and immunosuppressant drugs.
The majority of the soil microorganisms are nonpathogenic saprophytes, but there also exist such saprophytic bacteria that are pathogenic for human beings and animals.
Oligonucleotides specific for pathogenic and saprophytic Leptospira occurring in water.
are ubiquitous, saprophytic achlorophyllous algae that cause opportunistic infections in both small animals and disseminated disease actually in the immunocompromised ones [1].
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