Towards the end of the summer the u redo spores are replaced by
the winter resting-spores. called telculosporei, which are larger, thicker-walled and darker in colour These tclcutospores remain inactive on the straw until spring, when they germinate in manure heaps or on moist ground and produce minute sporidia, which are conveyed by air currents to the alternate host, in this case a barberry In due time the fungus, known as Aecidnim Berbendn, appears on the barberry leaves in the form of small cluster-cups on aecidia, each of which is filled with chains of orange-coloured aecidwspores. Infection of the leaves of the young wheat plants follows on the scattering of the aecidiospores a sorus of the rusty u redo spores is produced, and the life-cycle is complete Though this is the normal and complete development of Pucctnta gramtms, it is not invariably followed. In Australia, for instance, the berberry is an imported plant and of rare occurrence, yet rust is very abundant Tclcutospores of heteroccious rusts never reinfect the host on which they are produced, so that in many cases the
Fig. 4.—Puccinta grammis.
A,
e,
b.
Mass of tclcutospores (/) on a
leaf of couch-grass.
Epidermis ruptured.
Sub-epidermal fibres. (After
C
De Bary.)
Part
of
vertical
section
through leaf of Berberis
vulgaris, with a, aecidium
fruits, p, peridium, and sp,
spermogonia. (After Sachs.)
Mass of u redo spores {ur)
with one tcleutospore (()
sh, Sub-hymenialhyphae (After
De Bary)
u redo spores probably sui-vive the winter in Europe as well as in Australia and give rise to the rust of the following year Wind disfersal of the spores would account for mysterious appearances of the disease, in some years almost every straw in a whcat-fteld being affected, while in other years scarcely one is attacked Rust disease does not directly affect the grains, but both quantity and quality are impaired by the exhausted condition of the wheat plants. No cure is possible, but as winter wheat suffers less than spring wheat, early sowing is recommended. Fungus spores will not germinate without moisture, and attention to drainage helps to keep down this and other fungus pests.
It has also been observed that too heavy nitrogenous manuring stimulates and prolongs the growing period of the wheat, flowering is retarded, and thus there is a greater opportunity for infection to take place. Wheat growing on an old manure heap is nearly always badly diseased. Much attention has been paid recently to the cultivation of varieties of wheat that are immune to rust attacks, and care should be taken to select strains that have been proved able to resist the disease. The other two parasites, smut and bunt, affect principally the grain Smut of wheat, UstiCago Tnlici, infects the host at the time of flowering The fungus-spores, from some diseased plant, alight on the stigma of the flower, and germinate there along with the pollen-grains.
The developing seed thus encloses fungal hyphae, which remain dormant within the seed and in spring develop sy.n biotic ally with the growth of the wheat plant, doing no apparent injury until the time of fruiting ir, reached, when the fungus takes complete possession and, fills the new seed with a mass of dark coloured spores.
These are scattered over the field and alight on From Vine's Students* Tejt-Book of Botany, by permission
oi Swan,
Sonnenschein & Co.
Fig. 5 . — Germinating RestUstilago other flowering wheat plants.
It is impossible to detect the first infection or to cleanse the seed; the only remedy is to procure seed from a smut-free source, and to prevent further spread of the
disease by gathering all smutted heads before the spores have
matured or dispersed
TiUetia Tritici, bunt or stinking smut of wheat, is so-called because the bunted grain has a disagreeable odour of stale herrings.
Bread
made from bunted flour is dark in colour, and both unpalatable and unwholesome
The spores of the
fungus remain in the soil or in manure-heaps until spring, when „ they germinate and attack the first " green leaves of the host plant. The after development is similar to that of smut, and the seed grain becomes a mere mass of fungus
spores
Much can be done in this
case to clean the seed before sowing by immersing it in hot water or ing-Gonidia. Aof
in some solution that will kill the receplaculorum, B of TiUclia
spores without injuring the grain Caries.
Other parasitic fungi of less sp. The gonidium. economic importance occasionally pm. The promycelium. do considerable damage Erysiple d/ i^e sporidia: inBthe grammis, a mildey of grasses, has sporidia have coalesced in caused great loss in various counpairs at v. tries, Dilophia graminis sometimes causes deformities of the leaves and inflorescence, another somewhat similar fungus, Ophtobolus graminis, attacks the leaves and stalks near the ground, completely destroying the plants. Helmtnthosporium gramtneum, a disease of barley, has also been recorded as growing on wheat; it forms long narrow dark-brown streaks on the leaves, which wither and die. The lower leaves are usually the only ones attacked, and the yield of grain has not been seriously affected.
WHEATEAR, a bird’s name, perhaps of doubtful meaning,[1] though J. Taylor, the “water poet” (d. 1654), in whose writings it seems first to occur, and F. Willughby, explain (in the words of J. Ray, the latter’s translator) as given “because [in] the time of wheat harvest they wax very fat.” The wheatear, Saxicola œnanthe, is one of the earliest migrants of its kind to return to its home, often reaching England at the end of February and almost always by the middle of March. The cock bird, with his bluish grey back and light buff breast, set off by black ear-coverts, wings, and part of the tail, is rendered still more conspicuous by his white rump as he takes short flights in front of those who disturb him, while his sprightly actions and gay song harmonize so well with his delicately-tinted plumage as to render him a welcome object to all who delight in free and open country. When alarmed both sexes have a sharp monosyllabic note that sounds like chat; and this has not only entered into some of the local names of this species and of its allies, but has caused all to be frequently spoken of as “chats.” The nest is constantly placed under ground; the bird takes advantage of the hole of some other animal, or the shelter of a clod in a fallow-field or a recess beneath a rock. A large amount of soft material is therein collected, and on them from 5 to 8 pale blue eggs are laid.
The wheatear has a very wide range throughout the Old World, extending in summer far within the Arctic Circle, from Norway to the Lena and Yana valleys, while it winters in Africa beyond the Equator and in India. But it also breeds regularly in Greenland and some parts of North America. Its reaching the former and the eastern coast of the latter, as well as the Bermudas, may possibly be explained by the drifting of individuals from Iceland; but far more interesting is the fact of its continued seasonal appearance in Alaska without ever showing itself in British Columbia or California, and
- ↑ The vulgar supposition of its being an euphemism of an Anglo-Saxon name (cf. Bennett’s ed. of White’s Nat. Hist. Selborne, p. 69, note) must be rejected until evidence that such ever existed be adduced. It is true that “whittaile” (cf. Dutch Witstaart and French Culblanc) is given by Cotgrave in 1611; but the older names, according to Turner, in 1544, of “clotburd” (=clot-bird) and smatch (=chat) do not favour the usual derivation. “Fallow-chat” is another old name still locally in use, as is “coney-chuck.”