English edit

Noun edit

sporid (plural sporids)

  1. (chiefly botany) A sporidium.
    • 1884, John W. Glenn, Report of the experimental and other work done at [] the School of Agriculture, Horticulture and Botany, University of Tennessee during the Years 1883 and 1884, page 63:
      Further North, where it [sc. rust] first attacks the barberry its primary form and color is a yellow cup-cell, which matures and sends out spores which attack the wheat by penetrating into its tissue, as the sporid did the brier, and produce the red, globular cell.
    • 1886, Charles E. Bessey, The Essentials of Botany, page 172:
      357. [] Somewhat later in the season the same parasitic filaments which have been producing Red-rust spores begin to produce lines or spots of dark-colored, thick-walled, two-celled bodies (teleutospores), the so-called spores of the Black-rust [] Being thick-walled, they endure the winter without injury, and when spring comes [] they germinate on the rotting straw and produce several minute spores, called sporids. This is the fourth and last stage of the rust. The sporids fall upon Barberry-leaves and germinate [] giving rise to cluster-cups again.
    • 1875, E. Klein, “Research on the Smallpox of Sheep”, in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, volume 165, page 220:
      As the sporids originating from Micrococcus of sheep-pox develop, according to Hallier, in the air to a Cladosporium []