s 



follows .1 dormant peri d bj the formation of 



posteriori) uniflagellate s which pe through an exil pa- 



pilhi" (Shanor, lot 



tsitic in Ic/r/j coll. Olive, Shanor • I Karling 



< 1942b: 204; 194 b) inoculation in 



hlyaflagellata, -. fohnson (1955a 119, 



figs. I 7), l nited States; ich Karling (19441 646), 



Hk\/ii . 



Shanor was unable to infect other species of ichlya or species of 

 achlya, Protoachlya, Thraustotheca, Brevilegnia, I 1 

 tyuchus, ox [phanomyces with Rozella achlyae. It should be noted, 

 however, that none o\' the hosts in which the preceding species, R. 



tigerta, has been reported were used in his inoculation experiments. 

 If these were pro\ed capable of infection by A', achlyae, its validity 

 could well be questioned. 



Rozi i i \ \i i OMY< is Foust 

 J. Elisha Mitchell Sci. S> 198, pis. 22-23. 1937 



g. 14. p. 179) 



filling the more distal parts o\' the host hyphae. developing 

 linearly, from one to five in basipetal i. generally barrel- 



- \ 12 " in diameter (usuall) 24.6 by 15 

 ►nail) divided b\ one or more partitions into several smaller 

 $uall) with one diseharge papilla 1.3 \i long: zoosp. 

 ovoid, the br end anterior. 5-4 ;i wide, having a single globule. 



rellum I ig; resting -med behind the 



m one to thirty-five swollen spherieal. subspherical, 



cylindric irregu , . s 2 x long 



ining from c 

 .the latter spherical. 1 2-20 u 

 cludir . les, th a thick (1.5 



centra! 

 nular tsm, • _. 



- ■. liflas . spores 



sL) 



