Ophiobolus anguillides

Last updated

Ophiobolus anguillides
Scientific classification Red Pencil Icon.png
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Dothideomycetes
Order: Pleosporales
Family: Phaeosphaeriaceae
Genus: Ophiobolus
Species:
O. anguillides
Binomial name
Ophiobolus anguillides
(Cooke) Sacc., (1883) [1]
Synonyms [2]

Ophiobolus anguillides is a plant pathogen that causes stem canker on hemp.[ citation needed ]

Related Research Articles

Pier Andrea Saccardo Italian botanist and mycologist (1845–1920)

Pier Andrea Saccardo was an Italian botanist and mycologist.

Alessandro Trotter ) was an Italian botanist and entomologist who pioneered in cecidology, the study of plant galls.

Sylloge Nummorum Graecorum (SNG) is a project to publish ancient Greek coinage, founded in Great Britain by the British Academy in 1930. It was originally intended to catalogue both public and private Greek coin collections in the UK. It has gradually spread to other countries, and has now published more than 120 volumes. In 1972 the project was adopted by the Union Académique Internationale. Volumes are now published under the patronage of the International Numismatic Council. The British project has also established an online database, which includes over 25,000 coins in British collections. Though not necessarily comprehensive, it is considered a useful resource for researched Greek and Greek Imperial coinage for numismatists and historians alike at both specialist and undergraduate level.

Ophiobolus is a genus of fungi in the family Phaeosphaeriaceae.

Armillaria melleorubens is a species of mushroom in the family Physalacriaceae. This species is found in Central America.

Armillaria omnituens is a species of mushroom in the family Physalacriaceae. This species is found in Asia.

The menaulion or menavlion, also menaulon or menavlon (μέναυλον) was a heavy spear with a length of 2.7 to 3.6 metres with a thick shaft, used by the Byzantine infantry as early as the 10th century AD, against enemy heavy cavalry. To give it increased strength, whole oak or cornel saplings were preferably used. These were then tipped with a long blade of ca. 45–50 cm.

The Decree of Dionysopolis was written around 48 BC by the citizens of Dionysopolis to Akornion, who traveled far away in a diplomatic mission to meet somebody's farther in Argedauon. The decree, a fragmentary marble inscription, is located in the National Historical Museum in Sofia.

Syllogae minores is a term used in literature to describe small collections of Greek epigrams, which are part of the so-called Greek Anthology, the collection of Greek epigrams. The term "Syllogae" comes from the Greek word "Συλλογαί" (collections), while the term "minores" (minor) is used to distinguish them from the large and important collections of Palatine Anthology and the Anthology of Planudes. Some of these collections are important because of the epigrams which contain some not found in any of the other collections, while others are highly dependent on known sources, mainly of the Anthology of Planudes.

Wilhelm Dittenberger

Wilhelm (William) Dittenberger was a German philologist in classical epigraphy.

<i>Holwaya</i> Genus of fungi

Holwaya is a genus of fungi in the family Bulgariaceae. Holwaya is monotypic, containing the single species Holwaya mucida, which was originally named Bulgaria ophiobolus by Job Bicknell Ellis in 1883, and later transferred to the newly created Holwaya by Pier Andrea Saccardo in 1889. Holwaya mucida has an anamorph known as Crinula caliciiformis.

The Samir Shamma Prize for Islamic Numismatics is a bi-annual award for the best book or article in the field of Islamic Numismatics.

Many travellers in Lombard Italy during the sixth through eighth centuries wrote down inscriptions in syllogae, providing an important record of what was left of ancient Rome during the Lombard period. Generally written by Anglo-Saxons, the syllogae demonstrate that inscriptions were plentiful along the via Flaminia and in the city of Rome.

Théophile Alexis Durand

Théophile Alexis Durand was a Belgian botanist.

Sylloge, from the Ancient Greek συλλογή ("collection"), is a compilation of documents or data. In particular the term may refer to:

Lentinula reticeps is a species of agaric fungus in the family Omphalotaceae. It was originally described as Agaricus reticeps by French mycologist Camille Montagne in 1856. William Alphonso Murrill transferred it to the genus Lentinula in 1915.

Sylloge Tacticorum is thought to have been written in the middle of the tenth century, and is a work on the making of order and organization of military forces, and ways to outwit and overcome opponents in the field of battle.

Paerisades III King of the Bosporan Kingdom

Paerisades III was a son of Leukon II and Alkathoe, he also succeeded his brother Spartokos V as Spartocid king of the Bosporan Kingdom from 180 to 150 BC.

Cerocorticium molle is a species of crust fungus in the family Meruliaceae.

References

  1. Saccardo, Pier Andrea 1883. Sylloge Pyrenomycetum, Vol. II. Sylloge Fungorum. 2:1-813
  2. "Ophiobolus anguillide". MycoBank. Retrieved 7 September 2021.
  3. Cooke, Mordecai Cubitt; Ellis, J.B. 1877. New Jersey fungi. Grevillea. 6(37):1-18