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Definition of Pythium debaryanum
1. Noun. Fungus causing damping off disease in seedlings.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Pythium Debaryanum
Literary usage of Pythium debaryanum
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Pamphlets on Silviculture (1918)
"The strains available have been less destructive to the pines than Pythium
debaryanum and the stronger strains of Corticium vagum. It is not common. ..."
2. Botanical Abstracts by Board of Control of Botanical Abstracts (1921)
"yellows (Heterodera schachtii), soil sickness, and dodder (Cuscuta chinensis); (2)
on sorghum, stalk rot (Pythium debaryanum), head smut (Sphacelotheca ..."
3. Transactions by Massachusetts Horticultural Society (1902)
"This is of interest not only in demonstrating that a large percentage of damping
off of seedlings, generally attributed to the Pythium debaryanum, is caused ..."
4. Diseases of Cultivated Plants and Trees by George Massee (1915)
"... gardeners as 'damping off' in seedlings, is generally considered as being
primarily due to a minute parasitic fungus called Pythium debaryanum (Hesse). ..."
5. The Encyclopedia Americana: A Library of Universal Knowledge (1918)
"Of the numerous diseases that attack the plants the one usually seen earliest in
the season is damping-off (Pythium debaryanum"). which appears while the ..."
6. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1910)
"In a Nebraska nursery Rhizoctonia sp. and a fungus which appears to be Pythium
DeBaryanum, have been found in diseased seedlings, and inoculations indicate ..."