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Crop disease glossary: A to Z of technical terms
Our cereal disease publications include many technical terms. Although it is not essential to understand these terms to manage disease-causing organisms, this page explains the most commonly cited words.
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Encyclopaedia of cereal diseases
Crop disease glossary
A to B
Alternate host
A second host (of a different plant species) that is required by some pathogens to complete their life cycle
Anamorph
The imperfect or asexual stage of a fungus
Apothecium
A cup- or saucer-like ascocarp
Asexual
Without sex organs or sex spores (vegetative)
Ascocarp
A fruiting body that bears asci
Ascospores
Sexually produced spores contained within an ascus
Ascus (pl. asci)
A sac-like cell that contains the products of the sexual stage (teleomorph) as ascospores (usually eight)
Basidiocarp
A fruiting body that bears basidia
Basidiospores
Sexually produced spores borne on the outside of a basidium
Basidium
A cell or organ from which the sexually produced basidiospores (generally four) are formed
Biotroph
An organism entirely dependent upon another living organism (the host) as a source of nutrients
Break crop
A crop (e.g. oilseed rape) grown in rotation with other crops (e.g. wheat) to improve the growing conditions of the following crop
C to D
Chlamydospore
An asexual spore arising from a hyphal segment; a resting stage
Chlorosis
The yellowing of normally green plant tissue
Cleistothecia
The closed spherical ascocarp of the powdery (chasmothecia) mildews
Coleoptile
Protective sheath surrounding the emerging shoot of a cereal
Conidia
Asexual fungal spores formed from the end of a conidiophore
Conidiophore
A specialised hypha on which one or more conidia are produced
Cotyledon
Part of the embryo that forms the primary leaf
Crown roots
Roots that emerge from the base of the stem of the plant rather than the seed
Damping off
Disease of plant seedlings caused by seedborne or soilborne fungi
Dicotyledon
A flowering plant that has an embryo with two cotyledons (seed leaves)
Die-back
Necrosis of a shoot, beginning at the apex and spreading towards the older tissue; stem death may occur
Direct drilling
Drilling seed into ground with minimal cultivation
E to H
Ear blight
Infection of cereal ears resulting in bleaching of parts of the ear or discolouration of the glumes and grains
Endosperm
Nutritive tissue in a seed
Epidemic
The widespread incidence of an infectious disease in a population
Epidermis
The outermost layer of cells of an organ, usually only one cell thick
Ergot
The fruiting structure (sclerotium) of Claviceps spp.
Flag leaf
The final leaf to emerge in a cereal plant
Focus (pl. foci)
A concentrated area of diseased plants, usually around a primary source of infection, or coinciding with an area particularly favourable to disease
Forma specialis (f. sp.)
A group within a pathogen species that can only infect particular hosts
Glume
The outermost and lowermost bract of a grass (including cereals) spikelet (inflorescence)
Honeydew
A general term to describe a sticky secretion produced by some organisms, such as aphids or the pathogen Claviceps purpurea. Honeydew of the latter, which causes ergot, contains conidia.
Host
A living organism that harbours another (e.g. a pathogen)
Host-specific
Pertaining to a particular host; usually species-specific
Hypha
One of the filaments of a mycelium
I to N
Immune
Cannot be infected by a given pathogen
Inoculum
Microorganisms or virus particles that act as a source of infection
Inflorescence
The group or arrangement in which flowers are borne on a plant
Internode
Part of a plant stem between two successive nodes
Leaf sheath
The lower part of the leaf that more or less completely surrounds the stem
Lesion
A localised area of diseased tissue
Lodging
When a standing crop leans or bends; for example, because of adverse weather or soil conditions
Minimal cultivation
A reduced form of cultivation
Morphology
The form and structure of an organism
Mosaic
A pattern of disease symptoms on a plant, apparent as green/yellow or dark/light areas; usually referring to virus infections
Mycotoxin
A toxin produced by a fungus
Mycelium
The mass of hyphae forming the body of a fungus
Necrotroph
A microorganism that feeds only on dead organic tissue
Node
The level of a stem from which one or more leaves arise
P to S
Pathogen
An organism that causes disease
Perithecium
A flask-shaped ascocarp, containing asci
Primary inoculum
Spores or fragments of mycelium capable of initiating disease
Pseudothecia
Perithecium-like structures, each with a single cavity containing ascospores
Pustule
A spore mass that develops below the epidermis and breaks through at maturity
Pycnidium
Flask-shaped fruiting body, with an apical pore lined internally with pycnidiospores
Pycnidiospores
Spores from within a pycnidium
Rachis
The main axis of the inflorescence, or spike, of cereals to which the spikelets are attached
Resistance
The inherent capacity of a host plant to prevent or reduce the development of a disease
Saprophyte
An organism that derives its nutrients from dead or decaying tissue of another organism
Sclerotia
Compact masses of fungal hyphae (e.g. ergots), capable of remaining dormant for long periods and giving rise to fruiting bodies or mycelium
Seminal roots
Roots that develop directly from the seed
Senescence
The dying process of a plant or plant part
Sporangiophore
A hypha or fruiting structure bearing spores
Sporangium
A container or case of asexual spores. In some cases, it functions as a single spore
Spore
A reproductive unit in fungi
Sporulation
The period of active spore production
Species
Organisms in which the members have similar characteristics to each other and can breed with each other. Plural abbreviated as spp.
Susceptible
A host plant unable to prevent or reduce the development of a disease
T to W
Telium
Structure containing teliospores
Teliospores
Sexual spores produced within a telium
Teleomorph
In fungi, the sexual, or so-called 'perfect', stage or phase of growth
Tolerance
The ability of a plant host to sustain the effects of a disease without dying or suffering serious injury or crop loss
Uredium
The fruiting structure of a rust fungus in which uredospores are produced
Uredospore
The asexual spore of the rust fungus
Vector
An organism capable of transmitting inoculum
Virulence
The ability of a pathogen to produce disease
White heads (bleached ears)
Prematurely ripened ears of cereals, often caused by pathogen damage of the roots or stem base