Lexicographical Neighbors of Chlamydospores
Literary usage of Chlamydospores
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Journal of Infectious Diseases by Infectious Diseases Society of America, John Rockefeller McCormick Memorial Fund, John McCormick Institute for Infectious Diseases (1914)
"THE FORMATION OF chlamydospores IN SPORO- THRIX SCHENCKII* DAVID JOHN DAVIS (From
the Department of Pathology, University of Illinois, Chicago) The ..."
2. Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society by Cambridge Philosophical Society (1902)
"If the chlamydospores were sown on a watery extract of chestnuts made up with
agar-agar a further crop of chlamydospores was produced and at the same time ..."
3. Moulds, Mildews, and Mushrooms: A Guide to the Systematic Study of the Fungi by Lucien Marcus Underwood (1899)
"Two families are distinguished by the method of bearing spores from the germination
of the chlamydospores as follows : chlamydospores germinating with a ..."
4. Diseases of Cultivated Plants and Trees by George Massee (1913)
"... preceding culture; 7, microsclerotia germinating under same conditions as No.
5; 8, chlamydospores germinating in air, and producing the form known as ..."
5. The British Journal of Dermatology by British Association of Dermatology (1896)
"Bodin considers them to be chlamydospores. We cannot agree with this view. ...
He does not think them chlamydospores, but, as far as we can judge from his ..."
6. The Natural History of Plants: Their Forms, Growth, Reproduction, and by Anton Kerner von Marilaun (1902)
"Finally, the Fungus resolves itself into masses of black chlamydospores— the "
smut "—which appear between the glumes of the ear. These chlamydospores ..."
7. Diseases of Cultivated Plants and Trees by George Massee (1915)
"... then black, as they increase in size, the discoloration being due to an enormous
mass of dark-coloured chlamydospores of the Cladosporium developed ..."