Lexicographical Neighbors of Haustorial
Literary usage of Haustorial
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) (1903)
"This suggestion is further supported by the presence of fine granular material
in the tube and in the cells FIG. 4. — An embryo-sac in which the haustorial ..."
2. Guide to the Materials for American History in Roman and Other Italian Archives by Carl Russell Fish (1911)
"In places the roots of Krameria flatten and form cushions of tissue in contact
with the host, and haustoria arise from these cushions. These haustorial ..."
3. The Origin of a Land Flora: A Theory Based Upon the Facts of Alternation by Frederick Orpen Bower (1908)
"190), or an haustorial swelling may be formed, with convex curvature, on the side
next to the food supply (Sel. Martensii}. In embryos without suspensor ..."
4. Dwarf Mistletoes: Biology, Pathology, and Systematics by Frank G. Hawksworth, Delbert Wiens (1998)
"First, the endophytic system is more highly developed than in related genera,
and its haustorial processes more thoroughly permeate host tissues. ..."
5. Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences, 4th Series by California academy of sciences (1897)
"For instance, if the photosynthetic or other food-elaborating activity of a green
cell is reduced by the intrusion of a haustorial cell, the former will be ..."
6. Morphology of Angiosperms: (Morphology of Spermatophytes. Part II) by John Merle Coulter, Charles Joseph Chamberlain (1903)
"This haustorial tube was observed to ... All of these haustorial outgrowths are
supplied with active endosperm cells or nuclei. ..."
7. Memoirs of the Torrey Botanical Club by Torrey Botanical Club (1902)
"The haustorial portion is then near to the embryo. The basal cell is finally
crushed between the cells of the endosperm, the haustorial portion becomes ..."
8. Contributions from the Botanical Laboratory of the University of Pennsylvania by University of Pennsylvania Botanical Laboratory, University of Pennsylvania, Botanical Laboratory (1904)
"In all cases, the haus- torial cells lie with their long axes parallel to the
direction of each haustorial arm. The haustorium is always surrounded by ..."