With no special mechanism, ascospores are all forcibly discharged from the ascus to sit on the leaf surface.
It produces large, spherical, asexual spores that are forcibly discharged.
Spring rains cause spores to be forcibly discharged; they can be carried long distances by air currents to flowers, leaves, or young fruit.
Spores are forcibly discharged and can germinate within six hours upon landing on the plant surface.
This (ascospore) is "forcibly discharged into the air and can travel considerable distances."
In most discomycetes, each ascus contains eight sexual spores that are forcibly discharged into the air when mature.
The walls of the ascus become rigid, the ascospores collect at the apex, eventually being discharged forcibly through the slit.
Most species of the Entomophthorales produce ballistic asexual spores that are forcibly discharged.
The fruit bodies are secotioid, meaning the spores are not forcibly discharged, and the cap does not fully expand.
Most basidiospores are forcibly discharged, and are thus considered ballistospores.