. The fungi which cause plant disease . Plant diseases; Fungi. THE FUNGI WHICH CAUSE PLANT DISEASE 577 Conidia-bearing branches ellipsoid 23. Cylindrodendrum. Biogenous Conidia smooth Catenulate 24. Ovularia, p. 582. Solitary 25. Ovulariopsis, p. 582. Conidia densely spiny 26. Ramulaspera. Conidia muricate or tuberciilose-stellate Conidia globose Conidia merely muricate Hyphse loose, cobwebby 27. Sepedonium. Hyphse woven into a subgelatinous pellicle 28. Pellicularia, p. 382. Conidia setose at apex as well as muri- cate 29. Chsetoconidium. Conidia tuberculose-stellate 30. Asterophora. Acremoni


. The fungi which cause plant disease . Plant diseases; Fungi. THE FUNGI WHICH CAUSE PLANT DISEASE 577 Conidia-bearing branches ellipsoid 23. Cylindrodendrum. Biogenous Conidia smooth Catenulate 24. Ovularia, p. 582. Solitary 25. Ovulariopsis, p. 582. Conidia densely spiny 26. Ramulaspera. Conidia muricate or tuberciilose-stellate Conidia globose Conidia merely muricate Hyphse loose, cobwebby 27. Sepedonium. Hyphse woven into a subgelatinous pellicle 28. Pellicularia, p. 382. Conidia setose at apex as well as muri- cate 29. Chsetoconidium. Conidia tuberculose-stellate 30. Asterophora. Acremonium Link (p. 575) HjT)h8e subsimple, procumbent; conidiophores simple, short; conidia solitary, hyaline or light colored, ff \ f f oval to ellipsoid. '' ' ^ ' A genus of some ten species. An undetermined species is recorded by Humphrey "• ^^^ as causing disease of cucum- bers in Massachusetts. Sporotrichum Link (p. 576) Fig. 386.—Acremonium. Hyphse widely spreading, much branched; After Saccardo. conidiophores simple, short; conidia solitary or in groups on separate sterigmata, ovoid or subglobose. Over one hundred twenty-five species are described, most of which are saprophytes. S. pose Pk. Hyphse creeping, interwoven, branched, continuous or sparingly septate, variable in thickness, fi, hyaline, forming a loose cottony stratimi; conidia of two kinds; microconidia, globose or broadly ovate, dr-12 fi; macroconidia abundant, elongate elliptic to ovate elliptic, 1 rarely 2-septate, about three or four times as large as the Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Stevens, Frank Lincoln, 1871-1934. New York : Macmillan


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectfungi, bookyear1913