Lexicographical Neighbors of Aecidial
Literary usage of Aecidial
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Textbook of Botany for Colleges and Universities by John Merle Coulter, Charles Reid Barnes, Henry Chandler Cowles (1911)
"Again, the aecidial stage may be absent, as in Puccinia ... or both the aecidial
and uredo stages may be wanting, the basidiospores giving rise directly to ..."
2. Botanical Gazette by University of Chicago, JSTOR (Organization) (1918)
"... generation on species of Viola, while the aecidial generation of P. ...
generation are determined by the aecidial host. From these facts the author ..."
3. The American Naturalist by American Society of Naturalists, Essex Institute (1898)
"Although Klebahn is inclined to see minor differences in the shape and markings
of the aecidial spores of some of the species, it must be admitted that the ..."
4. Fungous Diseases of Plants, with Chapters on Physiology, Culture Methods and by Benjamin Minge Duggar (1909)
"The European rust has not been connected with an aecidial stage, ... the disease
may be readily reproduced from season to season without an aecidial stage. ..."
5. Botany by Wilfred William Robbins, John Nathan Martin (1919)
"It has its aecidial stage on Pines with five leaves in a fascicle, such as the
White Pine and ... In this Rust the aecidial stage is the most destructive. ..."
6. Journal of Mycology by William Ashbrook Kellerman, Job Bicknell Ellis, Benjamin Matlack Everhart, United States Dept. of Agriculture. Section of Vegetable Pathology (1905)
"The following may be quoted from this author: "This prompt and very abundant
appearance of the uredo could be interpreted only as the result of the aecidial ..."
7. Bulletin by North Dakota Agricultural Experiment Station (Fargo) (1899)
"It is believed by many botanists that this is the sex stage or its equivalent
and it is reasoned that if Puccinia graminis were deprived of this aecidial ..."