Lexicographical Neighbors of Ascogonia
Literary usage of Ascogonia
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Encyclopædia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature and by Hugh Chisholm (1911)
"Thus ascogonia with trichogynes have been observed in ¡inj ¡vnr pon, ... It i*
probable, however, that in the > -лих ol case* the ascogonia develop without ..."
2. Botanical Gazette by University of Chicago, JSTOR (Organization) (1918)
"... and was able to develop normal or rudimentary antheridia or to suppress them
entirely, while the ascogonia developed normally under all conditions. ..."
3. Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society by Cambridge Philosophical Society (1902)
"Moreover by transferring a culture producing these "ascogonia" to a dung decoction,
on which spore-balls are normally formed, the fungus makes the attempt, ..."
4. A Textbook of Botany for Colleges and Universities by John Merle Coulter, Charles Reid Barnes, Henry Chandler Cowles (1910)
"Usually several ascogonia are involved in a single ascocarp. FIG. 177. ...
somewhat diagrammatic section of an ascocarp (involving two ascogonia), ..."
5. The American Naturalist by American Society of Naturalists, Essex Institute (1905)
"As is well known, the Ascomycetes furnish numbers of illustrations where ascogonia
have not been found or appear in what seem to be reduced conditions and ..."
6. Strasburger's Text-book of Botany by Eduard Strasburger, Hans Fitting (1921)
"The antheridia are functionless or completely suppressed, and in extreme cases
the ascogonia are also wanting, only a tangle of hyphae being recognisable in ..."