10 BÜCHER, DIE MIT «UREDINES» IM ZUSAMMENHANG STEHEN
Entdecke den Gebrauch von
uredines in der folgenden bibliographischen Auswahl. Bücher, die mit
uredines im Zusammenhang stehen und kurze Auszüge derselben, um seinen Gebrauch in der Literatur kontextbezogen darzustellen.
1
The Annals and Magazine of Natural History
priori extremely improbable. Direct observation does not appear to me to render it
at all more'probable, for the productions in question are often met with quite
independently of each other. As to those who only see in the Uredines and their ...
2
The Annals and Magazine of Natural History: Zoology, Botany, ...
peculiar organ of the Uredines, and that its frequency amongst their son or fertile
groups, its relations of position, and its early appearance authorise us in
comparing it with the spermogonia of other Fungi, so that the sexuality of the
Uredines ...
Sir William Jardine, 1853
3
Blights of the Wheat, and Their Remedies
UREDINES. 55 been imagined by botanists who have observed the two
separately. These fungi are called uredines, the plural of uredo, which is a term
derived from the Latin word uro, to burn, because the discoloration of the parts of
plants ...
4
The annals and magazine of natural history, zoology, botany ...
Some mycologists see in this nothing but a cohabitation, which, although
frequent, is by no means necessary ; others suppose a compulsory relation
between the two Uredines, — that of a parasite with its host. If the latter opinion
prevailed, ...
5
Scottish Cryptogamic Flora, Or Coloured Figures and ...
Considerable confusion appears to exist among some of the orange Uredines
parasitic on the Rosacea, particularly between U. miniata and pingues. Persoon
brought two distinct species together under the former, which is not surprising, if
we ...
Robert Kaye Greville, 1823
6
Scottish Cryptogamic Flora
that Uredines, Puccz'm'w, zEcidia, and other minute GASTROMYCI, as well as
several individuals of the Order BYSSOIDFJE, are often exceedingly partial to
particular vegetables, and often wholly confined to a natural order, or even
section of ...
7
A report on the progress of vegetable physiology during the ...
M. LeVeiUe-* read a paper before the Philomathic Society of Paris on the
Uredines, in which he contests both M. Tur- pin's view and that of M. Unger on the
origin and signification of these formations. He considers the Uredines to be true
...
Franz Julius Ferdinand Meyen, 1839
Fries likewise states that the pseudo-peridium, which in the Uredines consists of
the epidermis only, is in the ;Ecidia thickened by the elevation of a part of the
parenchyma also. (464.) The Uredines are of different colours, and hence several
...
Gilbert Thomas Burnett, 1835
9
Annals and Magazine of Natural History
M. Léveillé contends against the idea of Turpin, that the Uredines are produced
from diseased Globuline, by which name M. Turpin means all sap-globules of
plants, however different they may be in their chemical composition. Moreover M.
10
Their Nature, Influence, and Uses
As Tulasne observes, the pseudospores of the /Ecidium and the greater number
of Uredines are easily wetted with water before arriving at maturity; but when they
are ripe, on the contrary, they appear to be clothed with a greasy matter which ...
Mordecai Cubitt Cooke, Miles Joseph Berkeley, 1989