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In botany, a haustorium (plural haustoria) is the hyphal tip of a parasitic fungus or of the root of a parasitic plant (such as in the broomrape family), that penetrates the host's tissue, but stays outside the host cell membrane. Fungi in all major divisions form haustoria. Haustoria take several forms. Generally, on penetration, the fungus increases the surface area in contact with host plasma membrane releasing enzymes that break down the cell wall, enabling greater potential movement of organic carbon from host to fungus.
Functional exchange takes place within the haustorial complex. The host supplies organic carbon to the fungus, and the metabolic activity within the complex is considerably greater than outside. Carbon from the host is absorbed by the fungus, and immediately transported to the rest of the thallus. The host plant appears to be functioning according to signals from the fungus and the complex appears to be under the control of the invader.[1] The haustorium may be balloon-, spiral-, or glove-shaped. [edit] Simpler TermsThe Haustorium is the appendage or portion of a fungus that infects plants and some insects. In the case of insects, such as ants or grasshoppers, it will expand inside of it and look as though it is "eating" the insect from the inside out. When it is finished, mushrooms emerge from the insect's carcass to spread more spores in order to infect new hosts. In the case of plants, the haustorium is where the fungal tissue attaches to plant tissue, and draws nutrients out of its host. [edit] References
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