View allAll Photos Tagged plantpath
Horns & Outfit: ~[LeiMotiv] Raizel Gacha(horns.corset, leggins, boots, & wings) - @Nightshade 2025 - maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Abracadabra/129/200/32
main store - maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Violet%20Hill/72/64/2501
Eyes: {S0NG} Ophelia Eyes Gacha - main store - maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Land%20Rentals/223/83/1064
Make Up: DAODAO - Chiroptera eyes&lips tattoo set 2K BOM (tintable) - @GothCore - maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/CORE/128/241/3501
main store - maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Vista%20District/180/154/2948
Piercings: ASCENT - Crux Piercings - @GothCore - maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/CORE/128/241/3501
main store - maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Makai/205/86/3334
Necklace & Sleeves: ~[LeiMotiv] Cecia gacha. collar & ~[LeiMotiv] Cecia gacha. sleeves - @Nightshade 2025 - maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Abracadabra/129/200/32
main store - maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Violet%20Hill/72/64/2501
Nails: .:.Pariah.:. Sick Claws - Geuse Edition - @GothCore - maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/CORE/128/241/3501
main store - maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Digital%20Frontier/202/221/23
Doll: Arpels - GOTHIC GIRL - PBR - main store - maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Pleione/70/25/22
Tea Set: *exist* Somber Seer's Teaset - @Nightshade 2025 - maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Abracadabra/129/200/32
main store - maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Noble%20Town/145/146/3006
Garden & Decor: [CIRCA] - "Raven's Twilight" Garden Gacha(rug, plant paths, lanterns, table, benches, cabInet & tree w/unicorn) - @Nightshade 2025 - maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Abracadabra/129/200/32
main store - maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Aurora%20Vale/212/106/38
This is the front table in my lab, where you and I would sit to have a friendly cup of tea. There's always something interesting on it. Well, usually a lot of things. Here it is on a different day.
That Inonotus glomeratus is cool--you can see more of it here.
The gift from the people of China? That's because of this.
Aspergillus on the book's edge. You can see the whole glorious demise of this novel in time lapse here:
www.plantpath.cornell.edu/photolab/TimeLapse2/NovelRot1_c...
The Cornell Plant Pathology Herbarium moved in 2007. Our concrete-block building used to be a chicken barn, then a storage place, then housed raptors, but it has been gutted and rebuilt. We're located on the east side of campus, adjacent to McGowan's Woods. We moved in in the Winter of 07-08.
I came home this evening to a strange bright yellow slimy growth on my landscaping. Through some research I found out it was, as they can call it, "dog vomit mold"!!!
Quote;
Slime molds are not fungi. Rather, they are primitive microorganisms that come in many shapes, colors, and sizes. There’s even one affectionately known in some circles as the dog-vomit slime mold. Slime molds commonly occur in lawns and mulch, and they consume other microbes such as bacteria. They don’t damage plants. Slime molds produce spore masses that break open and spread in rain.
Scroll down about halfway through this artical:
www.plantpath.k-state.edu/DesktopDefault.aspx?tabid=663
Click for photo:
www.plantpath.k-state.edu/FCKUploads/Image/Ext/Alert/PPEA...
Plant Pathology Kansas State University
Texas A&M University may or may not have model releases for people photographed on campus, in classrooms, research laboratories, or other areas related to Texas A&M. Use of the images for non-university purposes is subject to approval. Please contact the Office of Communications and Public Relations, Division of Research for further information: vpr-communications@tamu.edu or (979) 845-8069.
Phomas have a complete wall and oblong, clear spores (asexual; secondary spores).
Pycnidia are flask-shaped with one or more osteoles.
They look like perithecium, but the conidia are not produced in asci as ascospores are.
Therefore they are imperfect (asexual)
New home of the Cornell Plant Pathology Herbarium, a collection of fungi and plant disease organisms.
Perithecia of species of Chaetomium are decorated with curly hairs, like a cool hairdo. Inside each fuzzy ball are the spores. Time lapse of decay is here at our Photo Lab.
@Pathology2018 #pathology #cancer #epidemiology #pathologists #pathologist #surgicalpath #histopath #cytopath #liverpath #plantpath #cancercytopath #breastpath #reproductivepath #hematopath #neuropath #nephropath #immunopath #anatomic #digitalpath
@Pathology2018 #CME
#Pathologyeurope #pathdoctors #pathresidents #pathologists #pathology #cancerepidemiology #liverpath #neonatalpath #pediatricpath #breastpath #plantpath #cancercytopath #surgery #histopath #cytopath #digipath #hospitals #medicine #medical #pathologist #SLPeeps #gastrointestinalpath #clinicalpath #molecularpath
A perithecium of Chaetomium. Isn't it handsome?
Chaetomium likes wet cellulosic things. We grew this one on a wet novel, which you can see in glorious time lapse here:
www.plantpath.cornell.edu/photolab/TimeLapse2/NovelRot1_c...
when you see the spores lined up it suggests they are held together by asci, thus you have an ascomycete
Foliose Lichen pictured growing on the wooden seat of the long disused children's swing in the garden of my mother's house.
A extract from: www.plantpath.iastate.edu/pdc/files/Image/lichen"
These interesting organisms, however, do not cause disease problems. They live and gather sunlight on twigs or branches but do not infect the tree. Many lichens grow rapidly when exposed to full sunlight, which explains their common occurrence on dead or dying trees. In addition to growing on tree parts, lichens can be found on dead wood, rocks, soil, tombstones, or other sunny places.
A lichen is an unusual organism because it consists of two unrelated organisms, an alga and a fungus. These two components exist together and behave as a single organism. When two organisms live together in this way, each providing some benefit to the other, they are known as symbionts. The alga, because it is a green plant, can photosynthesize and provide energy for the lichen. The fungus contributes to the relationship by obtaining water and minerals and by protecting the algal cells from desiccation. Together the fungus and the alga make up what is known as the lichen thallus.
The color and growth form of the thallus is used to group and classify the lichens. The most common species of lichens on trees tend to be a gray-green color, but other species may be orange, yellow, slate blue, or black. There are three major growth forms of lichens: foliose, fructicose, and crustose. Foliose lichens have leaf-like lobes. These are the gray-green structures that can often be seen growing on tree trunks or branches. They are slightly raised and can grow and coalesce with other lichen thalli, covering several inches or more of bark. If moistened, they become somewhat rubbery and can be removed. Fructicose lichens have hair- like or stringy thalli and are less common. Finally, as the name implies, crustose lichens have crust-like thalli. Cruostose lichens can often be found tightly embedded on rocks or lower tree trunks. (Rocks with lichens are used to add interest to rock gardens.)
Besides being fascinating in their own right, lichens have medicinal uses, some food value, use as oils in perfumes, and are indicators of air pollution. Because lichens are extremely sensitive to air pollution, their absence can be used as a measure of how much an area is polluted.
More here (This is lovely for the background sound of birds singing and the splashing water of a babbling brook):
images.google.co.uk/imgres?imgurl=http://4.bp.blogspot.co...
This striking pattern on a fallen maple leaf must be caused by some disease—a mosaic virus, I thought, but the picture of maple mosaic virus here (gerberink.hubpages.com/slide/Maple-Tree-Problems/1521779) doesn't look at all like this. Maples are apparently pretty disease-free as trees go. One maple ailment called tar spot is caused by a fungus and causes vivid spots but they are solid black in the center and become raised as the fungus grows (picture and article, www.plantpath.cornell.edu/CUPpages/TypeGall-Rhy.html).
A few trees in a national forest area near our house show these leaves, all quite beautiful to the human love of pattern and contrast. I'll drop some by the ranger station.
Speaker Opportunity at #CME @Pathology2018
#pathdoctors #pathresidents #pathologists #pathology #liverpath #neonatalpath #pediatricpath #breastpath #plantpath #cancercytopath #surgery #histopath #cytopath #digipath #hospitals #medicine #medical #health #conferences #edinburgh #scotland #medicineconferences
PS:https://pathology.euroscicon.com
Mail to: pathologydoctor@yandex.com
On a macroscopic level, this is still Lycogala. Pic taken from here: plantpath.osu.edu/faculty/ellett/lycogala.html
@Pathology2018 #pathology #cancer #epidemiology #pathologists #pathologist #surgicalpath #histopath #cytopath #liverpath #plantpath #cancercytopath #breastpath #reproductivepath #hematopath #neuropath #nephropath #immunopath #anatomic #digitalpath #CME #plant #surgery #anatomy #medicine #doctor #nurses #hopitals