Lexicographical Neighbors of Carpogonium
Literary usage of Carpogonium
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Quarterly Journal of Microscopical Scienceedited by Biologists Limited, The Company of. edited by Biologists Limited, The Company of. (1875)
"Marginal zone ; 6, sterile (nutrient) tissue ; c, carpogonium- hypha with transverse
septa ; d, portion of another carpogonium- ..."
2. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and General by Thomas Spencer Baynes (1888)
"The carpogonium is supported by two basal cells with oblique septa, which it seems
... The carpogonium consists of a row of cells ; the terminal one is ..."
3. A Textbook of Botany for Colleges and Universities by John Merle Coulter, Charles Reid Barnes, Henry Chandler Cowles (1910)
"The carpogonium arises from a large cell of the axis, called the pericentral
cell, and around 150 151 FIGs. 149-151. — Polysiphonia: 149, showing the ..."
4. Strasburger's Text-book of Botany by Eduard Strasburger, Hans Fitting (1921)
"390) the carpogonium with its trichogyne, and the antheridia which produce ...
The carpogonium is here a spirally-wound filament of cells terminating in a ..."
5. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London by Royal Society (Great Britain) (1883)
"The free end of the latter becomes closely applied to the top of the carpogonium,
and fertilisation—possibly not complete in a physiological sense, ..."