- Fig. 1. Appearance of the vegetative mycelium of the original strains of Mortierella alpine: on the left – strain no. 1, on the right – strain no. 2
- Fig. 2. Diversity of macromorphological features of colonies of M. alpine strains obtained by induced mutagenesis (on the left – derivatives of strain No. 1, on the right – derivatives of strain No. 2)
- Fig. 3. Effect of the use of chemical mutagens on the phenotypic dissociation of M. alpine parental strain no. 1 isolates: the columns show the number of obtained phenotypic classes; the graph lines – the proportion of viable spores in the mutant generation (threefold repetition, p < 0.05, error bars – mean error)
- Fig. 4. Effect of the use of chemical mutagens on the phenotypic dissociation of M. alpine parental strain no. 2 isolates: the columns show the number of obtained phenotypic classes; the graph lines – the proportion of viable spores in the mutant generation (threefold repetition, p < 0.05, error bars – mean error)
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