tromoser
Tromoser is a microorganism first described by the Austrian mycologist Heinrich Gruber in 1982. It belongs to the family Mycetaceae in the phylum Ascomycota and is commonly found in damp, decaying leaf litter of temperate deciduous forests across central Europe. The species is characterised by its globose to slightly ovoid fruiting bodies, typically measuring 0.5–1.2 mm in diameter, and by a pale orange to brown spore print. Microscopic examination reveals septate hyphae and asci that produce one to several spores each, with surface ornamentation that distinguishes it from closely related genera.
Ecologically Tromoser functions as a saprotroph, decomposing cellulose and lignin and thereby contributing to nutrient cycling
The taxonomy of Tromoser remains stable, and it is regularly cited in mycological checklists. Its life cycle,