10 BÜCHER, DIE MIT «ARCHICARP» IM ZUSAMMENHANG STEHEN
Entdecke den Gebrauch von
archicarp in der folgenden bibliographischen Auswahl. Bücher, die mit
archicarp im Zusammenhang stehen und kurze Auszüge derselben, um seinen Gebrauch in der Literatur kontextbezogen darzustellen.
1
Elements of Structural and Systematic Botany
the female cell, or “archicarp,” is somewhat larger than the other and nearly oval
in form, and soon becomes separated by a partition from the filament that bears it.
The other branch (antheridium) grows up in close contact with the archicarp, ...
Douglas Houghton Campbell, 2013
2
Fungi: Ascomycetes, Ustilaginales, Uredinales
The perithecium is initiated by the development of a coil of large, deeply-staining
cells forming the archicarp. It arises amongst the vegetative filaments of the
stroma, forms a couple of loops and is continued towards the surface of the
stroma as ...
Helen Gwynne-Vaughan, 2010
3
A Textbook Of Botany - Vol 1, 11E
A — somatic hypha, B — young female branch, C — young antheridium and
female branch, D — coiled ascogonium and antheridium, D-F — sterile hyphace
growing from base of archicarp, G — ascogonium surrounded by sterile peridium
...
P S Trivedi S N Pandey, P S Trivedi S N Pandey, Pandey, S N & Trivedi, P S, 2009
1 1 AA) in the form of a septate, loosely coiled, female hyphal branch, called
archicarp. Young archicarp is differentiated into a lower mullicellular stalk, middle
unicellular ascogonium and the terminal unicellular trichogyne (Fig. 1 1.4B).
5
The Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales ...
greater tendency to hold stains and the size of their nuclei (Text-fig. 3, a, 6). The
number of cells which function as the archicarp could not be determined
accurately, but appears to be four or more. The archicarp grows at the expense of
the ...
6
Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales
greater tendency to hold stains and the size of their nuclei (Text-fig. 3, o, 6). The
number of cells which function as the archicarp could not be determined
accurately, but appears to be four or more. The archicarp grows at the expense of
the ...
The number of cells which function as the archicarp could not be determined
accurately, but appears to be four or more. The archicarp grows at the expense of
the cells of the core-tissue surrounding it. These become disorganized and are ...
8
Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club
I have grown this form abundantly in cultures on agar media and find an
archicarp of striking proportions. The long stalk, the many-celled coiled
ascogonium prolonged into a trichogyne-like portion (F1g. I, G), likewise the great
irregularity and ...
9
Contributions from the Department of Botany of Columbia ...
They think this form is becoming apogamous, but this fact would not, in their
opinion, affect the question of the homologies of the cells at the end of the
archicarp. I have described a form of archicarp in Ascobolus carbonarius which in
its origin ...
Columbia University. Dept. of Botany, 1914
10
Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden
322 ANNALS OF THE M1ss0URr BOTANICAL GARDEN haploid eggs by sperms
from the normal pollen. This sterility of the archicarp, I believe, _has been brought
about by its assumption more and more of a vegetative character.