Definition of Albuginaceae

1. Noun. Fungi that produce white sori resembling blisters on certain flowering plants.

Exact synonyms: Family Albuginaceae
Generic synonyms: Fungus Family
Group relationships: Order Peronosporales, Peronosporales
Member holonyms: Albugo, Genus Albugo

Lexicographical Neighbors of Albuginaceae

Albireo
Albizia julibrissin
Albizia lebbeck
Albizia saman
Albizzia julibrissin
Albizzia lebbeck
Alborg
Albrecht's bone
Albrecht Durer
Albrecht Eusebius Wenzel von Wallenstein
Albright's disease
Albright's hereditary osteodystrophy
Albright's syndrome
Albright knot
Albright knots
Albuginaceae
Albula
Albula vulpes
Albulidae
Albuquerque
Alby
Albyn
Alca
Alca torda
Alcaeus
Alcaic
Alcaic verse
Alcatraz
Alcea
Alcea rosea

Literary usage of Albuginaceae

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Botanical Gazette by University of Chicago, JSTOR (Organization) (1902)
"... the albuginaceae, and to indicate its specialized rather than primitive character. The general course of development of both antheridium and oogonium, ..."

2. Fungous Diseases of Plants, with Chapters on Physiology, Culture Methods and by Benjamin Minge Duggar (1909)
"Some members of both families (albuginaceae and ... albuginaceae. In this family the conidia are borne in chains; the conidiophores arise in the form of ..."

3. Moulds, Mildews, and Mushrooms: A Guide to the Systematic Study of the Fungi by Lucien Marcus Underwood (1899)
"... Family I. albuginaceae. 1. Conidiophores club-shaped, formed under the epidermis of the host; conidia formed in chains in white masses under the ..."

4. Essentials of College Botany by Charles Edwin Bessey, Ernst Athearn Bessey (1914)
"Order PERONOSPORALES. Non-aquatic; mostly parasitic in the tissues of higher plants; usually forming zoospores in conidia. Family 11. albuginaceae. ..."

5. Contributions from the New York Botanical Garden by New York Botanical Garden (1907)
"The genus Albugo constitutes the family albuginaceae, the species of which bear a superficial resemblance to the Uredinales, from which they are readily ..."

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