Asexual spores are either '''sporangiospores''' or '''conidiospores'''. Sporangiospores are formed when the cytoplasm cleaves within a sporangium (multinucleate segment of hyphae), producing either naked '''zoospores''' which have one or more flagella and are liberated through a hole in the sporangial wall or producing '''aplanospores'''. Aplanospores are non-motile and walled and are released when the sporangial wall breaks down. Conidiospores, such as [[Systemic Mycoses#Aspergillosis|''Aspergillus'']] can be formed directly from the mycelium, produced within a specialised fructification or can be formed externally by the abstriction of a conidiophore. Different types of conidia can be produced which differ in cell size and number and are called either '''microconidia''' (small and unicellular) or '''macroconidia''' (large and multicellular). | Asexual spores are either '''sporangiospores''' or '''conidiospores'''. Sporangiospores are formed when the cytoplasm cleaves within a sporangium (multinucleate segment of hyphae), producing either naked '''zoospores''' which have one or more flagella and are liberated through a hole in the sporangial wall or producing '''aplanospores'''. Aplanospores are non-motile and walled and are released when the sporangial wall breaks down. Conidiospores, such as [[Systemic Mycoses#Aspergillosis|''Aspergillus'']] can be formed directly from the mycelium, produced within a specialised fructification or can be formed externally by the abstriction of a conidiophore. Different types of conidia can be produced which differ in cell size and number and are called either '''microconidia''' (small and unicellular) or '''macroconidia''' (large and multicellular). |