Examples of saprophyte in the following topics:
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- This may occur with plants that are parasitic or saprophytic: ingesting and utilizing dead matter as a food source.
- A saprophyte is a plant that does not have chlorophyll, obtaining its food from dead matter, similar to bacteria and fungi.
- (Note that fungi are often called saprophytes, which is incorrect, because fungi are not plants).
- Most saprophytes do not directly digest dead matter.
- Saprophytic plants are uncommon with only a few, described species.
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- This bacterial lifestyle is called parasitic or saprophytic.
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- Most bacteria that are associated with plants are actually saprophytic, and do no harm to the plant itself.
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- Pathogenic fungi comprise a eukaryotic kingdom of microbes that are usually saprophytes but can cause diseases in humans, animals, and plants.
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- Bacteria that use decaying life forms as a source of energy are called saprophytes.
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- Fungi are mostly saprobes (saprophyte is an equivalent term): organisms that derive nutrients from decaying organic matter.
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- C. immitis is a dimorphic saprophytic organism that grows as a mycelium in the soil and produces a spherule form in the host organism.