Lexicographical Neighbors of Carpogonial
Literary usage of Carpogonial
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature and (1910)
"... carpogonial and antheridial branches. B. Polysiphonia ¡f>., transverse section
through a branch, and at off of pericentral cell. ..."
2. An Introduction to the Study of Seaweeds by George Murray (1895)
"carpogonial branch consists of four cells, and is formed, near the apex of a
growing shoot, ... Simultaneously with the formation of the carpogonial branch, ..."
3. Strasburger's Text-book of Botany by Eduard Strasburger, Hans Fitting (1921)
"The carpogonial branches consist of about seven cells, the terminal one bearing a
... After fertilisation the carpogonial cell grows out into a filament, ..."
4. A University Text-book of Botany by Douglas Houghton. Campbell (1907)
"Of the latter, the one turned toward the shoot, ie — the inner one — gives rise
to a short carpogonial branch, usually of four cells (Fig. 112, B). ..."
5. Journal of Botany, British and Foreign (1898)
"... arising from the fertilized carpogonium ; the middle filament, when present,
fuses with cells which lie in the middle of the carpogonial branch and also ..."
6. An Atlas of Practical Elementary Biology by George Bond Howes (1885)
"Columella. rn Nutritive branch of carpogonial hypha. rp. Carpogonium. c».
Chlamydospore. c.*. Ascus forming branch of carpogonial hypha. en. ..."