「spores」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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uilt and which corporate radio has spread like | spores across the nation." |
rs renewed their efforts in studying bacterial | spores after it was discovered that using moderate pr |
Long filamentous forms are often observed, but | spores and capsules are absent. |
l consists of a preserved sporocarp containing | spores, and was recovered from a Tertiary chert of In |
eese is inoculated with Penicillium roqueforti | spores and aged for at least 28 days. |
Viruses, bacteria, and the | spores and hyphae of fungi can still enter the plant |
rding to just released documents, that anthrax | spores and bubonic plague bacilli were made into weap |
ently yellow center, a collar-like ring, white | spores, and off-white gills in maturity. |
e mission - to take Cobra-La's metal devouring | spores and infect Unicron with them. |
gicide that inhibits the germination of fungal | spores and it blocks the growth of the fungal myceliu |
nt had weaponized 6,000 liters of B. anthracis | spores and 12,000 liters of botulinum toxin in aerial |
o the time and environment of emplacement than | spores, and lithological similarities contradict this |
ain airborne pollens from anemophilous plants, | spores, and dust due to attraction by the electrostat |
Spores and microscopic features : The spores are whit | |
Volvariella speciosa has pink | spores and no ring or volva. |
EOW will kill | spores and many viruses and bacteria. |
Spores and microscopic features : The spores measure | |
The virus can rest in these | spores, and when the spores germinate into mobile zoo |
All | spores and cultivations of this species nowadays are |
d of exinite maceral found in coal formed from | spores and pollen. |
The | spores are roughly ellipsoid, smooth, thin-walled, co |
Panaeolus tropicalis | spores are dark violet black to black, ellipsoid, and |
The | spores are common and widespread in sediments of this |
The | spores are dark purple brown, suboblong, and 11 by 6 |
The | spores are dark violet brown, oblong to ellipsoid to |
At times the | spores are densely clustered or patchily distributed, |
Spores are borne on the end of hair-like cells (corti | |
The | spores are cylindrical to ellipsoid, 4-6 by 1.5-2 μm, |
The | spores are tear-shaped, and measure 7-10 by 3-4 µm. |
The | spores are dark purple brown, ellipsoid, and 13 - 14. |
becomes brown as the season progresses and the | spores are dropped. |
The | spores are cinnamon brown, smooth and ellipsoid with |
each side of the pinna midrib, and the minute | spores are wind-dispersed. |
More importantly, for identification, | spores are resistant to commonly employed staining te |
Spores are spherical or nearly so, measuring 24 by 21 | |
The | spores are elliptical to pip-shaped, slightly thick-w |
When the | spores are heavily clustered, mycorrhizologists and o |
The | spores are airborne and found in the soil and water, |
s behind, just like human immortals whose time | spores are removed. |
ual, while the final stage is sexual; here the | spores are spindle-shaped and measure 25-30 by 5-6 μm |
The | spores are so hardy that samples of dried dung can la |
He found that yeast | spores are diploid and haploid cells occur as a resul |
h age from pale-pink to a chocolate color, and | spores are dark brown. |
The | spores are ellipsoid, smooth, colorless, distinctly a |
Psilocybe semiinconspicua | spores are 8-10 x 5-7 µm , subovoid to ellipsoid, thi |
essure does not always work, as some bacterial | spores are more resistant to germination under pressu |
cherries and plums are pruned in summer, when | spores are least likely to be present and when diseas |
The | spores are oval-shaped and smooth in the white stage |
ed impact on non-target trees since the fungal | spores are ubiquitous anyway and healthy trees are re |
Spores are white in mass. | |
Resting | spores are seldom observed. |
The | spores are also white. |
The | spores are black to dark brown. |
Spores are produced on specialised fronds. | |
Mature | spores are necessary for species determination. |
The | spores are (8.2)9.3 - 10.4(13.5) |
These | spores are ellipsoid to oblong, smooth, and colourles |
The | spores are subrhomboid to subellipsoid and (6)6.7-8(8 |
The | spores are smooth and round to broadly elliptical. |
The club-shaped | spores are single or form long chains. |
Spores are sometimes preserved between its layers of | |
In some cases inoculation occurs when | spores are sprayed over the grapes, while some vineya |
The | spores are pale olive in color, elliptical, and measu |
ed in deposit, such as with a spore print, the | spores are white. |
guessowii | spores are white in deposit, broadly ellipsoid to ell |
Psilocybe atlantis | spores are 9 x 6 x 5.5 µm with a broad germ pore. |
The | spores are lemon-yellow in colour, and oblong-ellipso |
first line of the TREATMENT section reads "AFB | spores are present in virtually every hive." |
ive hyphal networking and intense intraradical | spores associated with older roots of host plants. |
ents, though at a slower speed, while shooting | spores at the player. |
There is a sac that contains the | spores at the bottom of each leaf base. |
The plant is very difficult to propagate using | spores, but it may be more easily done using sections |
It is unable to be propagated by | spores but the lobes from the frond base can be remov |
is and the diploid sporophyte produces haploid | spores by meiosis. |
Heterosporic plants produce small | spores called microspores which either germinate to b |
Where there are favourable conditions the | spores can survive. |
illus (0.5-0.8 µm x 0.7-1.7 µm), does not form | spores, capsules or aerial hyphae. |
nge plant which sprayed his face with mutative | spores, causing him to grow an array of eight additio |
ls are rare in the park, but pollen grains and | spores collected from here suggest that these Campani |
Because | spores contain no psilocybin or psilocin, they are le |
Ward demonstrated that disease | spores could be spread on the wind and recommended gr |
Flint, however, managed to deliver the | spores, crippling Unicron. |
Spores: Dark violet brown, subrhomboid in face view, | |
Spores: Dark purplish brown, rough. | |
lling has yielded an assemblage of palynomorph | spores dating from the last (Devensian) glacial perio |
Diethyl sulfite inhibits the growth of mold | spores during grain storage. |
ascospores break easily into uninucleate part | spores, each of which is presumably capable of causin |
he Psilocybe semiinconspicua basidia have four | spores each. |
Microscopic features: | Spores ellipsoid to subovoid in side and face view so |
dryadeus is a parasitic saprobic fungus, with | spores entering wounds on broadleaf trees (predominan |
The | spores escape through an opening at the top. |
and twigs until harvest, providing a source of | spores for the fruit rot phase. |
Its | spores form smooth-walled, unfused, naked dyads. |
Its | spores formed permanent dyads. |
ed of pulmonary anthrax after inhaling anthrax | spores from a letter that is believed to have arrived |
plant specialists have propogated plants from | spores from this site which may be grown in the home |
micals approved for decontamination of anthrax | spores from contaminated buildings, such as occurred |
ng all forms of vegetative bacteria, bacterial | spores, fungi, fungal spores, and viruses". |
temperature and (usually high) moisture, these | spores germinate, grow as hyphae and colonize the ins |
hen subjected to moderate pressures, bacterial | spores germinate, and the resulting spores are easily |
Its (probablyu) alete | spores had thin walls. |
e and another treatment (such as heat) to kill | spores has not yet been reliably achieved. |
Haplosporid | spores have a single nucleus and an opening at one en |
is pale yellow with an orange stalk and their | spores have a diameter of 7.5 μm. |
The | spores have characteristic features-they are dark bro |
through division of this rhizome, and also by | spores held under the fronds. |
Bacillus anthracis | spores in particular are highly resilient, surviving |
es in which Steffanic is exposed to the deadly | spores in a valiant sacrifice, and dies. |
he micromanipulation of single yeast cells and | spores in order to investigate them on a genetic leve |
ght to be an extraordinary abundance of fungal | spores in sediments) formed, suggesting that fungi we |
are treated so here; they differ in producing | spores in small lateral structures in the leaf axils. |
rm of Malacosporean, but the absence of mature | spores in salmonid hosts, the lack of fish to fish tr |
he carpogonium then breaks down, releasing the | spores into the environment. |
dispersal, nor for the apparent uptake of the | spores into clouds. |
s, which had given rise to a large quantity of | spores into the atmosphere. |
The α-amanitin concentration in the | spores is about 17% that of the fruit body tissues. |
The legal status of Psilocybe | spores is even more ambiguous, as the spores contain |
Infection by | spores is rare. |
The dark color of the | spores is the easiest way to distinguish Anthoceros f |
ditions such as desert environments due to the | spores it forms. |
Spores: Jet Black, 12 - 15 x 7 - 11 µm, smooth, opaqu | |
All form oval | spores located centrally in a non-swollen sporangium. |
t in order to increase the stainability of the | spores; malachite green is the primary stain used in |
The biofouling process begins when algae | spores, marine invertebrate larvae, and other organic |
ish brown at first, turning dark purple as the | spores mature. |
yellow, but becomes pale-brownish-gray as the | spores mature. |
se, starting out gray and turning black as the | spores mature. |
Additionally, like any powder, the | spores may exacerbate breathing difficulties. |
The spore print is pink, and the individual | spores measure 5 by 6 μm. |
f stainless steel with no gaps or joints where | spores might collect. |
drawing in airborne particles or contaminants ( | spores, molds, fungi, bacterium, etc.). |
The next morning, the Rakweed plant releases | spores, most of which fly out of the window, though s |
are not ideal for germination, so the original | spores must be killed instead. |
Yeast | spores occur everywhere, including the surface of cer |
Dormant | spores occur on the cuticles of butterflies, in betwe |
es indicated, "it was clear the silicon in the | spores occurred naturally and were not added to weapo |
Myxosporean | spores of genera belonging to the Myxobolidae are fla |
Heterospory is the production of | spores of two different sizes and sexes by the sporop |
glycoprotein produced abundantly on hyphae and | spores of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in soil and in |
eding of the larvae, are penetration sites for | spores of the larch cancer Lachnellulla willkommii. |
While this substance may contain the | spores of wild yeast, it is not necessary composed of |
For example, | spores of lichen or fungus, being the pioneer species |
jecting a toxic saliva that often contains the | spores of the Ashbya fungus, and then suck juices out |
The | spores of the fungus release the mycotoxin Sporidesmi |
beetle excavates a tunnel in which it releases | spores of its fungal symbiont. |
e of interfering with enzymes found within the | spores of many fungi, preventing germination from occ |
Spores of N. ceranae seem to be slightly smaller unde | |
techniques were not infallible: in 1939 viable | spores of certain heat-resistant bacteria were found |
blished research showing that the mutations of | spores of the ringworm fungus occurred in the same sp |
example, peanut clump virus can survive in the | spores of its fungal vector until a new growing seaso |
iled to consistently find ornamentation on the | spores of material he collected, and preferred to ret |
quelques champignons parasites", he inoculated | spores of P. infestans on healthy potato leaves and o |
this cyanobacterium and the germinating fungal | spores of Erioderma pedicellatum can only begin withi |
furthermore, in contrast to G. pectinatum, the | spores of G. xerophilum are yellow and contain oil dr |
The | spores of P. teres are usually carried by wind. |
Spores of the Oidium anamorph of Microsphaera penicil | |
nly visible difference between the gametes and | spores of Cladophora is that the gametes have two fla |
the bryzoan Flustra, and discovered that black | spores often found in oyster shells were the eggs of |
These plants bear | spores on specialized structures at the apex of a sho |
isseminate linseed cakes infected with anthrax | spores onto the fields of Germany. |
have switched to grazing on fungi or ingesting | spores or pollen. |
taxon Mastigomycotina as fungi with flagellate | spores or gametes. |
hysical presence of the pathogen (mycelium and | spores), or through the host's own response to infect |
minants (e.g. chemical warfare agents, anthrax | spores or other toxic industrial materials(TIM)). |
of their life cycle as aeroplankton, often as | spores, pollen, and wind-scattered seeds. |
Liptinites were originally formed by | spores, pollen, dinoflagellate cysts, leaf cuticles, |
Photograph of | spores produced by the oak wilt fungus. |
peratures combined with more and more bacteria | spores promotes their spread with these favorable con |
Spores: Purple brown in deposit, rhomboid or subrhomb | |
However, the relative proportion of fungal | spores relative to spores formed by algal species is |
Spores, Ronald, 1984 The Mixtecs in Ancient and Colon | |
After several weeks, the | spores seemed to have disintegrated, decomposing and |
Psilocybe stuntzii | spores seen through a microscope |
However, for these lichen to release their | spores simultaneously, it is necessary for them to en |
However, A. subrufescens produces smaller | spores, sized 6-7.5 by 4-5 µm. |
Spores: Smooth and ellipsoid to oval, measuring 7.5 x | |
ptogamic flora, i.e. plants which reproduce by | spores, such as algae, ferns and mosses. |
distinguish the group include unusually small | spores that are monolete and unornamented. |
es in this section are characterized by having | spores that may be either smooth or with short spines |
The genus is distinguished by having | spores that are dark brown to black, a relatively fri |
Polymyxa forms highly resistant | spores that can rest in soils for more than two decad |
The size, shape and amyloid reaction of the | spores, the dimensions of the basidia, the presence o |
The | spores themselves survive digestion by being particul |
e few species in its genus able to form sexual | spores through meiosis, allowing crossing of strains |
rly 500 species of life, from microscopic fern | spores to large carnivorous dinosaurs, justified it b |
ed, creating air channels that allow the mould | spores to grow into hyphae and cause the cheese's cha |
Christensenia produces enormous amounts of | spores, up to 7,000 spores per sporangium. |
ng bacterial endospores), viruses, germs, mold | spores, volatile organic compounds (VOCs), fungal air |
r testing in 1958 showed that when cereal rust | spores were delivered via an oil-based vector (wet sp |
f the trama and the faint ornamentation of the | spores were inconsistent with placement in Xerocomus. |
erformed by the Planetary Protection unit, its | spores were the most consistently resistant, and it s |
Its | spores were trilete and around 30 µm across. |
This ultimately divides to form new | spores, which are released when the host's cells burs |
In this case it is the inclusion of deadly | spores which turn people into creatures made of fungu |
ucleate, and ultimately divides to form motile | spores, which have two flagella in typical dinoflagel |
These | spores, which caused a lack of preservation in the ea |
ies is characterized by and smooth, elliptical | spores which measure 9 - 12 x 6 - 8. North American c |
It has dark brown, coarsely roughened | spores which resemble those of Panaeolina foenisecii. |
e species: A. flavoconia has elliptic, amyloid | spores, while A. frostiana has round, non-amyloid spo |
Spores will overwinter on uninfected green leaves, an | |
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