- Acervulus (pl. Acervuli) - A saucer-shaped, spore-producing body of a
fungus embedded in host tissue.
- Actinomycetes - Filamentous bacteria that produce several antibiotics
and give soil its earthy smell.
- Alternate Host - One of two kinds of plants on which a parasitic fungus
(e.g., rust) must develop to complete its life cycle.
- Anthracnose - Disease caused by acervuli-forming fungi (order
Melanconzales) and characterized by sunken lesions and necrosis.
- Antibiotic - A complex chemical substance produced by one microorganism
that inhibits or kills other microorganisms (e.g., streptomycin).
- Antibody - A specific protein formed in the blood of warmbloodedanimals
in response to the injection of an antigen.
- Antigen - Any foreign chemical (normally a protein) that induces
antibody formation in animals.
- Antiseptic - A substance that prevents, retards, or destroys microorganisms.
- Apothecium - An open, cuplike, or saucer-shaped sexual fungal fruiting
body containing asci.
- Ascomycetes - A group of fungi characterized by the production ofsexual
spores within an oval or tubular membranous sac called an ascus.
- Asci - Several saclike cells in which meiosis occurs and whichgenerally
contain eight spores each.
- Asexual - Vegetative; without sex organs, sex cells, or sexual spores,
as the anamorph of a fungus.
- Atrophy - The reduction in size of an organ by distributed metabolism.
- Autoecious - The need of only one host for completing the life cycle ofa rust.
- Bacterium (pl. Bacteria ) - Microscopic one-celled organism. Cell type
lacks a distinct nucleus, sexual recombination, and chlorophyll. Itdoes
have cell walls and DNA.
- Bactericide - Any chemical or physical agent that kills or protects
plants from bacteria.
- Basidiomycetes - A group of fungi characterized by the production of
sexual spores on a club-shaped filament called the basidium.
- Basidiospore - A haploid spore formed externally on a basidium.
- Basidium (pl. Basidia; adj. Basidial) - Short, club-shaped fungus cell
on which basidiospores are produced.
- Blight - Any sudden, severe, and extensive spotting, discoloration, or
destruction of leaves, flowers, stems, or entire plants, usually attacking
young, growing tissues. (In disease names, often coupled with the name
of the affected part of the host; e.g., leaf blight, blossom blight, shoot
blight). Blotch - A blot or spot, usually superficial and irregular in shape and
size, on leaves, shoots and fruit.
- Burn - The condition in which the cells of the host become reddish or
dark brown and collapse.
- Callus - Parenchyma tissue that grows over a wound or graft andprotects
it against drying or other injury.
- Calyx - Outermost whorl of organs of a flower.
- Canker - A dead area on a stem surrounded by living cortical tissues.
- Carrier - A plant or animal that carries a virus or other infective
agent without showing symptoms.
- Chemotherapy - Treatment of disease by chemicals (chemothera-peutants)
working internally. Chemical agent has toxic effect directly or
indirectly on the pathogens without injury to the host plant.
- Chimera - A plant with several tissue sectors or layers differing in
genetic or chromosomal constitution from the original plant.
- Chlamydospore - A thick-walled asexual resting spore formed by the
modification of a fungus hypha.
- Chlorosis - The abnormal plant color of yellowish-white or gray
condition of plant parts resulting from the incomplete destruction of the
chlorophyll. Cirrus (pl. Cirri) - A curllike tuft; a tendrillike mass or "spore
horn" of forced-out spores.
- Cleistothecium (pl. Cleistothecia) - Closed, usually spherical,
ascus-containing structure of powdery mildew fungi. A sexual fruiting
structure. Conidiophore - The specialized fungal hyphal branch that bears the
conidium. Conidium (pl. Conidia) - Asexual spore formed by abstriction and
detachment of part of a hyphal cell at the end of a conidiophore and
germinating by a germ tube.
- Coremium - A cluster of erect fungus filaments (hyphae) that are joined
together to form a column and that bear asexual spores (conidia).
- Cultivar (abbr. cv.) - A cultivated plant variety or culturalselection.
Used synonymously with variety.
- Curl - The distortion, fluting, and puffing of a leaf resulting fromthe
unequal development of its two sides.
- Damping-off - Decay of seeds in the soil or young seedlings before or
after emergence.
- Diagnostic - Distinctive. A distinguishing characteristic serving to
identify or determine the presence of a disease or other condition.
- Dieback - Progressive death of shoots, branches, and roots generally
starting at the tips.
- Diploid - Having a double set of chromosomes (2n chromosomes) per cell.
- Disease - The sum of the deviations of the vital functions beyond the
latitude of health. (This is just one of many definitions of disease.)
- Disinfectant - Any agent for destroying the causal agent of disease
after infection. Disinfestant - Any agent that removes, kills, or inactivates
disease-causing organisms before they can cause infection.
- Dissemination - The spread of infectious material (inoculum) from a
diseased to a healthy plant by wind, water, humans, insects, animal,
machinery, or other means.
- Dormancy - Nongrowing (inactive, quiescent) state of a plant.
- Dwarfing - The underdevelopment of any organ of a plant.
- Enation - Epidermal outgrowth. Endogenous - Produced inside.
- Endophytic - Living within another plant.
- Enphytotic - Plant disease that causes about the same amount of injury
each year. Epidemiology (adj. Epidemiologic) - The study of factors influencing
the initiation, development, and spread of infectious disease.
- Epinasty - An abnormal downward-curving growth or movement of a leaf,
leaf part, or stem.
- Epiphytotic - The widespread and destructive development of a diseaseon
many plants in a community or communities.
- Eradicant - Chemical used to eliminate a pathogen from a host or an
environment.
- Eradication - Control of disease by eliminating the pathogen after itis
already established.
- Escape - Plants in a given population that remain free of disease where
it is prevalent, although they possess no natural inherent resistanceto
the disease. (See Klendusity.)
- Etiolation - Yellowing and long, spindly growth as a result of
insufficient light. Etiology - The description of the cause of disease.
- Exclusion - Control of disease by preventing its introduction (e.g., by
quarantines) into disease-free areas. Exogenous - Produced outside.
- Exudate - A substance (usually liquid) formed inside a plant and
discharged from diseased or injured tissue. The presence of an exudate often
aids in diagnosis (e.g., fire blight bacteria).
- Facultative Parasite - An organism that is ordinarily saprophytic but
under proper conditions may be parasitic.
- Facultative Saprophyte - An organism that is ordinarily parasitic but
under proper conditions may be saprophytic.
- Fasciation - A distortion of a plant caused by an injury or infec-tion
that results in thin, flattened, and sometimes curved shoots.
- Flagellum - A long hairlike or whiplike contractile filament protruding
from certain bacterial cells and spores of fungi and that enablemovement.
- Flagging - The loss of turgor and the drooping of plant parts, usually
following a water deficit.
- Fleck - A small, white to translucent lesion (spot) visible through a leaf.
- Frass - Excrement of an insect, usually mixed with plant debris.
- Fruiting Body - Any of various complex, spore-bearing fungalstructures.
- Fumigant - Vapor-active chemical used in the gaseous phase to kill or
inhibit the growth of microorganisms or other pests.
- Fungi Imperfecti - A major group of fungi for which no sexualproduction
of spores is known. Fungicide - An agent that inhibits or kills fungi.
- Fungistat - A chemical or physical agent that prevents fungi from
developing but does not kill them.
- Fungus - A single- or many-celled, naked or covered, irregular or
filamentous organism, usually with a chitinous cell wall. Lacking chlorophyll
and incapable of manufacturing its own food, it feeds on dead or living
plant or animal matter .
- Gall - Outgrowth or swelling of unorganized plant cells produced as a
result of attack by bacteria, fungi, or other organisms.
- Germinate - To begin growth of a seed or spore.
- Girdle - To circle and cut through; to destroy vascular tissue, as in a
canker or knife cut that encircles the stem.
- Giant Cells - Large, usually multinucleate cells formed by abnormalcell
fusions or failure of proper cell wall formation following growth and
nuclear division. Associated with nematode feeding.
- Gram-negative (alternatively, Gram-positive) - A negative (or positive)
reaction to the standard Gram's stain for bacteria.
- Haploid - The chromosome number of the gametophytic generation or phase
or having a single complete set of chromosomes.
- Haustorium (pl. Haustoria) - A modified mycelial branch that grows into
a plant cell, makes intimate contact with the protoplast, and absorbsfood.
- Heteroecious - Requiring two or more unrelated hosts for completing the
life cycle of a rust.
- Heterothallic - Producing fusing gametes on separate and distinct mycelia.
- Homothalic - Producing fusing gametes on the same mycelium.
- Host - The plant on or in which a parasite lives and from which it
obtains its food. Hyaline - Clear, translucent.
- Hyperplasia - The abnormal increase in the number of cells withouttheir
enlargement. Hypertrophy - The abnormal increase in the size of cells, causing
abnormal development of an organ or tissue.
- Hypha - A single filament of a fungus mycelium.
- Hypoplasia - The underdevelopment of cells, tissues, or organs.
- Immunity - A relationship between a plant and a causal agent in which
the plant does not become diseased.
- Incubation Period - Time between infection by a pathogen and appearance
of symptoms.
- Indexing - Determining presence of disease in a plant by removing buds
or other parts for inoculation of a susceptible indicator plant that
exhibits specific symptoms of a transmissible disease.
- Infection - Process in which a pathogen enters, invades, or penetrates
and establishes a parasitic relationship with a host plant.
- Infestation - Presence in numbers (e.g., of insects, mites, or
nematodes). Do not confuse with "infection," a term that applies onlyto living,
diseased plants or animals.
- Inoculum - Pathogen or pathogen part (e.g., spores, mycelium) that
infects plants. Intercellular - Between the cells.
- Intracellular - Within the cells.
- Klendusity - Ability of an otherwise susceptible variety of plant to
escape infection because of the way it grows (e.g., early-maturing plants
escape late-season diseases).
- Latent - Present but not manifest or visible, as a symptomless infection.
- Lesion - A local injury or delimited diseased area.
- Local Necrosis - The death or disintegration of cells and tissues in a
localized area of an organ.
- Macroscopic - Visible to the naked eye, without the aid of amicroscope.
- Micron - A millionth of a meter (or, a thousandth of a millimeter).
- Microscopic - Visible only with the aid of magnification.
- Monotrichous - Having only one flagellum.
- Mosaic - Disease symptom characterized by nonuniform foliagecoloration,
with a more or less distinct intermingling of normal and light green
or yellowish patches. Usually caused by a virus.
- Mottle - An irregular pattern of light and dark areas.
- Mummification - The drying up and shriveling of fruits and other plant parts.
- Mummy - A dried and shriveled fruit.
- Mushroom - A conspicuous fleshy fungus fruiting body.
- Mycelium (pl. Mycelia) - The mass of interwoven threads (hyphae) making
up the vegetative body of a fungus.
- Mycoplasma - Degenerate bacteria that do not have cell walls.
Mycoplasmas are smaller than bacteria but larger than viruses. They cause
animal and human diseases.
- Mycoplasmalike Organism (abbr. MLO) - See Phytoplasma.
- Mycorrhiza (pl. Mycorrhizae) - A symbiotic assocation of a fungus with
the roots of a plant.
- Necrosis (adj. Necrotic) - The death or disintegration of cells and tissues.
- Nematicide - A chemical or physical agent that kills, inhibits, or
protects against nematodes.
- Nematodes - Generally microscopic tubular worms, usually living free in
moist soil, water, and decaying matter, or as parasites of plants andanimals.
- Obligate - Necessary; obliged. An obligate parasite is an organism that
can live only on living tissue.
- Oogonium (pl. Oogonia) - Female egg cell of oomycete fungi.
- Oomycete - A group of fungi that produce oospores such as Pythium,
Phytophthora, and Aphanomyces.
- Oospore - Thick-walled, sexually-derived resting spore of oomycete fungi.
- Overwinter - To survive over the winter period.
- Parasite - An organism that lives within or upon another livingorganism
from which it derives nourishment and in which it may cause various
degrees of injury.
- Parasitism - The phenomenon of the growth of one organism, theparasite,
at the expense of another, the host.
- Pathogen - An entity capable of producing disease.
- Pathogenicity - An entity's capacity for producing a disease.
- Pectinase - The enzyme that breaks down pectic substances to simple
carbohydrates. Perithecium - A round to flask-shaped, thick-walled spore case
containing asci and with an ostiole (pore).
- Peritrichate (alt. Peritrichous) - Having flagella all over the outside
of the cell.
- Pesticide - Any chemical or physical agent that destroys pests (e.g.,
fungicide, insecticide, miticide).
- Phycomycetes - A group of fungi that may consist of one cell or have
filaments (hyphae) with few or no cross walls and that reproduce
sexually by union of two sex cells.
- Phyllody - Change from a normal flower to leafy structures.
Characteristic of certain phytoplasma infections.
- Physiogenic Disease - A disease produced by some unfavorable physicalor
environmental factors (e.g., light, temperature, water, soil
nutrients, chemical, physical or mechanical injury).
- Phytoplasma - Microorganisms found in phloem tissue that resemble
mycoplasmas in all respects except that they cannot yet be grown on
artificial nutrient media. Formerly known as mycoplasmalike organism (MLO).
- Phytotoxic - Injurious to plants.
- Plasmodium - A naked, multinucleate, vegetative (fungal ) body capable
of amoeboid motion.
- Polymorphism - The existence of several asexual spore stages in thelife
cycle of an organism.
- Primary Infection - The first infection of a plant, usually in the
spring by an overwintering sexual pathogen propagule.
- Primary Inoculum - lnoculum, usually from an overwintering source, that
initiates disease in the field, as opposed to inoculum that spreads
disease during the season.
- Propagule - The part of an organism that may be spread so as to
reproduce the organism.
- Protectant - A chemical applied to a plant surface in advance of the
pathogen to prevent infection.
- Pustule - A local elevation of the epidermis that may rupture to expose
the causal agent (e.g., rust, smut, white rust, etc.).
- Pycnidium (pl. Pycnidia) - )-The asexual, globose or flask-shaped
fruiting body of fungi-producing conidia.
- Quarantine - Regulation forbidding sale or shipment of plants or plant
parts, usually to prevent disease, insect, nematode, or weed invasionofan area.
- Race - A strain of a pathogen characterized by the limitation of its
host range to certain species and varieties of plants.
- Resistance - The sum of the qualities of the host and causal agent that
retard the activities of the causal agent.
- Rhizoid - Intercellular thallus branch that absorbs food and provides
anchorage. Rhizomorph - An aggregation of hyphae into a cordlike or rootlike
strand.
- Rickettsia - A single-celled animal and human diseasecausing organism
with a partial cell wall that has not been grown in culture.
- Ringspot - Symptom of a disease characterized by yellowish or dead
(necrotic) rings with green tissue inside them, as in certain virus diseases.
- Rogue (alt. Roguing) - To remove and destroy undesired individualplants
from a planting on the basis of disease infection, not being
true-to-type, insect infestation, or other reason.
- Rot - Softening, discoloration, and often disintegration of succulent
plant tissue as a result of fungal or bacterial infection. Rugose - Wrinkled.
- Russet - Yellowish-brown or reddish-brown scar tissue on the surface offruit.
- Sanitation - Destroying all infested and infected plant parts duringthe season.
- Saprophyte - An organism that derives its nourishment from dead organicmatter.
- Scab - Crustlike disease lesion.
- Sclerotium (pl. Sclerotia) - A small, compact, hardened mass of hyphae
that may bear fruiting bodies. Can help fungus survive adverseenvironments.
- Scorch - "Burning" of plant tissue from infection, lack or excess of
some nutrient, or weather conditions.
- Secondary Infection - lnfection resulting from the spread of infectious
material produced after a primary infection.
- Senesce (n. Senescence; adj. Senescent) - To decline with maturity or
age, often hastened by stress from environment or disease.
- Shothole - Disease symptom characterized by the dropping out of small,
round fragments of leaves, making them look as if riddled by shot.
- Sign - The manifestation of disease by the presence of structures ofthe
causal agent. Soilborne - Refers to many fungi able to survive in the soil as
saprophytes. Also called "soil inhabitant."
- Sorus (pl. Sori) - A compact aggregation of spores and/or sporophores
growing out to the surface of the host.
- Spiroplasma - A single-celled, wall-less, spiral, filamentous organism
associated with corn stunt and citrus stubborn disease.
- Sporangiophore - A sporangium-bearing hypha.
- Sporangium (pl. Sporangia) - A fruiting body that produces asexual
spores within a more or less spherical wall.
- Spore - Reproductive body of fungi and other lower plants, containing
one or more cells; a bacterial cell modified to survive an adverseenvironment.
- Sporodochium (pl. Sporodochia) - A cushion-shaped spore-producing body
of a fungus. Sporogenous - Capable of forming spores.
- Sporulation - The process of producing spores.
- Sterilant - Any agent or chemical that destroys all living organisms in
a substance such as soil. Streak - An elongated lesion with irregular sides.
- Stroma (pl. Stromata) - A compacted mass of hyphae that supports sexual
fruiting bodies. Stunt - A wide range of parasitic and nonparasitic agents.
- Stunted - An unthrifty plant reduced in size and vigor due to
unfavorable environmental conditions.
- Stylet - Slender, tubular mouthparts in plant-parasitic nematodes or aphids.
Substrate - The substance or object on which an organism lives and from
which it gets nourishment.
- Sun Scald - Plant tissues burned or scorched by too much sun exposure
and other unfavorable conditions.
- Susceptibility - The sum of the qualities of a plant and causal agent
that allows the development of the causal agent.
- Symptoms - External or internal physical characteristics of disease
expressed by the host plant.
- Systemic - Pertaining to a disease in which an infection leads to
general spread throughout the plant body. Also, a chemical that spreads
internally through a plant.
- Teliospore - Thick-walled resting spore produced by some fungi, notably
rusts and smuts, that germinates to form a basidium.
- Thallus - The vegetative body of the lower plant that has not
differentiated into stems and leaves.
- Tolerance - Ability of the plant to endure the development of the
parasite without showing marked symptoms of disease.
- Tylosis (pl. Tyloses) - A bladderlike intrusion of the protoplasm froma
parenchymatous cell through a pit into the lumen of a xylem cell.
- Variety - One or more races of a pathogen that are characterized by the
limitation of their host range to a certain genus or genera. Also, a group
of closely related plants of common origin and similar characteristics
within a species (se e also Cultivar).
- Vector - An agent, such as an insect, nematode, or fungus, that may
transmit a pathogen.
- Vein-banding - Symptom of a virus disease in which regions along the
veins are darker green than the tissue between the veins.
- Viroid - An infectious nucleic acid without a protein coat that causes
potato spindle tuber or chrysanthemum stunt.
- Virulent - Strong ability to produce disease.
- Viruliferous - Capable of transmitting a virus.
- Virus - Submicroscopic, infectious agent, too small to be seen with a
compound microscope, that multiplies only in living cells. A virus
consists of nucleic acid surrounded by a protein coat.
- Water-soaked - Describing plants or lesions that appear wet and darkand
are usually sunken and translucent.
- Wilt - Lack of freshness and turgor and drooping of leaves from lack of
water; a vascular disease that interrupts the plant's normal uptake and
distribution of water.
- Witches' Broom - Abnormal, brushlike development of many weak shoots.
- Yellowing - The yellow color of plant parts resulting from theexcessive
proportion of yellow pigments, in turn produced by the
underdevelopment or partial destruction of the green pigments.
- Yellows - A disease characterized by yellowing and stunting of affected
parts (caused by fungi, virus, bacteria, or deficiency of essentialelements).
Zoospore - Fungus spore with flagella, able to move in water.
Zygospore - A fungal resting spore produced by the fusion of equal gametes.
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