The photo below is of a rhizomycelial marine chytrid, genus
Nowakowskiella or Cladochytrium; the sporangium below is
about 25 microns across -- after dissolution of the plug at the tip,
swimming zoospores (posteriorly uniflagellate, 3 to 5 microns diam) are
released. It is a very regular occupant of living green leaf blades of
turtlegrass (Thalassia testudinum). It is not easily cultured, and
may not be viable without the living host. [UPDATE: Sharon Mozley has it
in culture! -- emozley@dogwood.botany.uga.edu] Could it be involved in
turtlegrass dieback, under conditions of stress to the seagrass?!
See Newell SY and JW Fell. 1980. Mycoflora of turtlegrass
(Thalassia testudinum Konig) as recorded after seawater
incubation. Bot. Mar. 23:265-275.