English

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Etymology

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From idio- +‎ andro- +‎ spore +‎ -ous.

Adjective

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idioandrosporous (not comparable)

  1. Having androspores formed on filaments without oogonia.
    • 1874, The Journal of Botany, British and Foreign, new series, volume III (volume XII of the entire work), London: Ranken & Co., page 373:
      By far the greatest number of the species are gynandrosporous—one only as yet observed, B. polyandra, Cleve, being idioandrosporous.
    • 1936, Rhodora, page 69:
      They differ, however, chiefly in having an idioandrosporous habit, a greater size, frequently long seriate oogonial chains, and the oospore usually not quite filling the oogonium.
    • 1987, G. Robin South, Alan Whittick, An Introduction to Phycology, Blackwell Scientific Publications, published 1996, page 139:
      In idioandrosporous species the androspore is chemically attracted to the female filament (Rawitscher-Kunkel & Machlis, 1962).
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