English

edit
 
English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia
 
A propagule of Avicennia sp.

Etymology

edit

See propagate and -ule.

Noun

edit

propagule (plural propagules)

  1. (biology) A reproductive particle released by an organism in order to propagate itself, by means such as dispersal or infection, to the next stage in its life cycle.
    • 1989, Discovery and Innovation, Volumes 1-2, Academy Science Publishers, page 90,
      Propagule size could be one of these silvical characteristics.
    • 1992, I. C. Tommerup, “2: Methods for the Study of the Population Biology of Vesicular-arbuscular Mycorhizal Fungi”, in J. R. Norris, D. J. Read, A. K. Varma, editors, Methods in Microbiology, Volume 24: Techniques for the Study of Mycorrhiza, Academic Press, page 27:
      In many combinations of fungi and soils more than one method of estimating propagules will need to be used to provide a valid test of propagule numbers.
    • 2011, Committee on Assessing Numeric Limits for Living Organisms in Ballast Water, Assessing the Relationship Between Propagule Pressure and Invasion Risk in Ballast Water, National Research Council of the National Academies, National Academies Press, page 126,
      Combined with information on organism concentrations, this proxy could allow estimates of either total number of propagules per discharge or cumulative propagule supply over some temporal and spatial scale.
    • 2014, D[enny] J. Bruck, “Entomopathogens as Insect Biocontrol Agents”, in Robert G. Linderman, D. Michael Benson, editors, Compendium of Rhododendron and Azalea Diseases and Pests, 2nd edition, St. Paul, Minn.: APS Press, →ISBN, page 84, column 2:
      Many foliar-feeding hosts infected with bacterial and viral pathogens display classic "summit" diseases, in which the infected insects move up the foliage immediately before they die. This behavioral host response to infection results in increased transmission to uninfected hosts, as the pathogen propagules from the cadaver shower down on the foliage below, resulting in increased transmission to the rest of the population.

Derived terms

edit
edit

Translations

edit

See also

edit

Further reading

edit

French

edit

Noun

edit

propagule f (plural propagules)

  1. propagule

Further reading

edit