1 3 o 



MOJRPHOLOGY. 



(figs. 147-150). These two forms occur on the stems, blades, 

 etc., of the wheat, also on oats, rye, and some of the grasses. 



290. Teleutospores of the black-rust form. If we scrape off 

 some portion of one of the black pustules (sori), tease it out 



Fig. 151. 



Teleutospores of wheat rust, 

 showing two cells and the pedicel. 



150. 



Head of wheat showing black rust spots 

 on the chaff and awns. 



Fig. 152. 



Uredospores of wheat rust, one 

 showing remnants of the pedicel. 



in water on a slide, and examine with a microscope, we will see 

 numerous gonidia, composed of two cells, and having thick, 

 brownish walls as shown in fig. 151. Usually there is a slender 

 brownish stalk on one end. These gonidia are called teleuto- 

 spores. They are somewhat oblong or elliptical, a little con- 

 stricted where the septum separates the two cells, and the end 

 cell varies from ovate to rounded. The mycelium of the fungus 



