A cleistothecium (plural: cleistothecia) is a globose, completely closed fruit body with no special opening to the outside. The ascomatal wall is called
peridium and typically consists of densely interwoven hyphae or
pseudoparenchyma cells. It may be covered with hyphal outgrowth called
appendages. The asci are globose, deliquescent, and scattered throughout the interior cavity i.e. as in
Eurotium or arising in tufts from the basal region of ascocarps as in
Erysiphe. In this case the ascocarp is round with the hymenium enclosed, so the spores do not automatically get released, and fungi with cleistothecia have had to develop new strategies to disseminate their spores. The truffles, for instance, have solved this problem by attracting animals such as
wild boars, which break open the ascocarps and spread the spores over a wide area. Cleistothecia are found mostly in fungi that have little room available for their ascocarps, for instance those that live under tree bark, or underground like truffles. == Gymnothecium ==