Sporulation Information and Courses from MediaLab, Inc.
These are the MediaLab courses that cover Sporulation and links to relevant pages within the course.
Learn more about laboratory continuing education for medical technologists to earn CE credit for AMT, ASCP, NCA, and state license renewal and recertification. Or get information about laboratory safety and compliance courses that deliver cost-effective OSHA safety training and continuing education to your laboratory's employees.
| The bare fruiting heads shown here, characteristic of Aspergillus niger, demonstrate a spherical vesicle with phialides positioned around the entire circumference of the surface. The other Aspergillus species that also sporulates circumferentially is: | View Page |
| A presumptive identification of the four genera of slower growing pathogenic dematiaceous molds can be made by observing specific types of conidiation. Match the names of the species of dematiaceous pathogenic fungi with the corresponding microscopic features illustrated in the photomicrographs: | View Page |
| Match the name of each fungal species listed in the drop-down box with its most likely corresponding morphologic feature. | View Page |
| The type of sporulation of the dematiaceous mold that is illustrated in this photomicrograph is called: | View Page |
| The dematiaceous fungus that may produce both acrotheca and rhinocladiella types of sporulation is: | View Page |
| The chief microscopic feature possessed by Ulocladium species by which it can be differentiated from the close look-alike Stemphilium species is: | View Page |
| A yeast identification system gave a biotype number for an unknown isolate that did not differentiate between Candida tropicalis and Candida parapsilosis. This isolate could be identified as C. parapsilosis in a cornmeal agar preparation if it produced: | View Page |