Seta (mycology)
Setae (plural from Latin seta ~ bristle) in mushrooms are thick-walled, rigid and pointed ends of mushroom threads ( hyphae ), which are usually pigmented in the cell wall . They can appear as hair, sterile elements in the fruit layer ( paraphyses , cystids ) or other surfaces of the fruit body , but also in the flesh ( trama ) or fungal tissue ( mycelium ). Setae are not homologous formations, for the designation as Setae only the spear-like shape is decisive.
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- Heinrich Dörfelt , Gottfried Jetschke (Ed.): Dictionary of mycology. 2nd Edition. Spektrum Akademischer Verlag, Heidelberg / Berlin 2001, ISBN 3-8274-0920-9 , p. 290.