. The British rust fungi (Uredinales) their biology and classification. Rust fungi. TELEUTOSPORES 35 The teleutospores are generally produced in sori like those of the uredospores; they frequently arise on the same mycelium, and very often on the same spore-bed, mingled with the uredo- spores. If both are found in any species, the teleutospores are always formed at least not earlier, and usually later than the uredospores. Their primary function now is to tide over an unfavourable period; for this reason they are sometimes called, in England, tuinter-spores. They may be one-celled as in. I'ig.


. The British rust fungi (Uredinales) their biology and classification. Rust fungi. TELEUTOSPORES 35 The teleutospores are generally produced in sori like those of the uredospores; they frequently arise on the same mycelium, and very often on the same spore-bed, mingled with the uredo- spores. If both are found in any species, the teleutospores are always formed at least not earlier, and usually later than the uredospores. Their primary function now is to tide over an unfavourable period; for this reason they are sometimes called, in England, tuinter-spores. They may be one-celled as in. I'ig. 23. Figures of various Teleutospores of Pucciniacese (after Sydow). Prom left to right, they are (in the top row) Puccinia, roesteliiformis, P. conspersa, P. globosipes, P. Megatherium, Vromyces globosvs, Hapalophragmium Derridis; (in the second row) P. appendiculata, P. Buphorbiae var, intu- mescens, P. deformata, , , , Triphraginium Cedrelae. All x 480. (Non-British.) Vromyces, two-celled as in Puccinia, radiately three-celled as in Triphragmium, cruciately four-celled as in Pucciniastrum, linearly many-celled as in Phragmidium and especially in Xenodochus (see also Fig. 23). But it is misleading to speak of a many-celled spore: each cell, taken separately, is a spore and can germinate by itself without reference to the others. .3-2. 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 Grove, W. B. (William Bywater), 1848-1938. Cambridge, University Press


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