- crustose
- crus·tose
English syllables. 2014.
English syllables. 2014.
Crustose — A crustose lichen, Caloplaca marina Crustose is a habit of some types of algae in which the plant grows tightly appressed to a substrate forming a biological layer of the adhering organism. Some species of marine algae of the Rhodophyta, in… … Wikipedia
crustose — adjective Etymology: Latin crustosus crusted, from crusta Date: circa 1879 having a thin thallus adhering closely to a substrate (as of rock, bark, or soil) < crustose lichens > compare foliose, fruticose … New Collegiate Dictionary
crustose — adjective (of lichens) having a thin crusty thallus that adheres closely to the surface on which it is growing crustose lichens • Pertains to noun: ↑crust … Useful english dictionary
crustose — /krus tohs/, adj. Bot., Mycol. forming a crusty, tenaciously fixed mass that covers the surface on which it grows, as certain lichens. Cf. foliose, fruticose. [1875 80; < L crustosus covered with a crust, equiv. to crust(a) CRUST + osus OSE1] * * … Universalium
crustose — adjective /ˈkɹʊs.təʊs,ˈkɹʊs.toʊs/ Of a lichen, growing tightly appressed to the substrate … Wiktionary
crustose — [ krʌstəʊs] adjective Botany (of a lichen or alga) forming or resembling a crust. Origin C19: from L. crustosus, from crusta (see crust) … English new terms dictionary
crustose — crus•tose [[t]ˈkrʌs toʊs[/t]] adj. fng bot forming a crusty, tenaciously fixed mass that covers the surface on which it grows, as certain lichens • Etymology: 1875–80; < L crustōsus covered with a crust, der. of crust(a) crust … From formal English to slang
crustose thallus — noun thin crusty lichen thallus; adheres closely to or is embedded in the surface on which it grows • Hypernyms: ↑thallus … Useful english dictionary
fungus — fungic /fun jik/, adj. funguslike, adj. /fung geuhs/, n., pl. fungi /fun juy, fung guy/, funguses, adj. n. 1. any of a diverse group of eukaryotic single celled or multinucleate organisms that live by decomposing and absorbing the organic… … Universalium
Coralline algae — Temporal range: Early Cretaceous–recent[1][2][3] … Wikipedia