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egg squash A variety of squash with small egg-shaped fruit.
Source: Websters Dictionary
(01 Mar 1998)
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squash <zoology> An American animal allied to the weasel.
Origin: Cf. Musquash.
<botany> A plant and its fruit of the genus Cucurbita, or gourd kind.
The species are much confused. The long-neck squash is called Cucurbita verrucosa, the Barbary or China squash, C. Moschata, and the great winter squash, C. Maxima, but the distinctions are not clear. Squash beetle, a large black American hemipterous insect (Coreus, or Anasa, tristis) injurious to squash vines.
Origin: Massachusetts Indian asq, pl. Asquash, raw, green, immaturate, applied to fruit and vegetables which were used when green, or without cooking; askutasquash vine apple.
Source: Websters Dictionary
(01 Mar 1998)
vitelline layer of egg <zoology> The membrane, usually of protein fibres, immediately outside the plasmalemma of the ovum and the earlier stages of the developing embryo. Its structure and composition vary in differing animal groups.
(18 Nov 1997)
centrolecithal egg An egg in which the yolk is concentrated near the centre of the egg cell, as is the case in many of the insects.
(05 Mar 2000)
microlecithal egg An egg containing a small amount of deutoplasm.
(05 Mar 2000)
mosaic egg <biology> At one time a distinction was drawn between those organisms in which the egg seemed to have a firmly committed fate map built in and regulating embryos.
In the former, after the first cleavage one blastomere was committed to produce one set of tissues, the other blastomere a different set and removal of one blastomere led to the production of an incomplete embryo.
This was particularly obvious in mollusc development where one blastomere had the polar lobe material. This early differentiation (or determination) of blastomeres for particular fates was in distinction to regulating embryos in which the removal of one blastomere did not matter, the other blastomere compensating and producing a full set of tissues.
The distinction is, however, only based upon the timing of differentiative events and within a few divisions the regulating embryo also becomes a mosaic of determined cells.
(18 Nov 1997)
primary egg membrane See: egg membrane.
(05 Mar 2000)
high-egg-passage vaccine Living Flury strain rabies virus at the 180th to 190th level egg passage (embryonate eggs), used for vaccination of cattle and cats, low-egg-passage (LEP) vaccine: at the 40th to 50th passage level, containing 103 to 104 mouse LD50; nonpathogenic in dogs but retains some pathogenicity for cattle and cats.
(05 Mar 2000)
sea egg <zoology> A sea urchin.
Source: Websters Dictionary
(01 Mar 1998)
secondary egg membrane See: egg membrane.
(05 Mar 2000)
homolecithal egg An egg in which the total amount of yolk is small and fairly uniformly distributed throughout the cytoplasm.
Synonym: isolecithal egg.
(05 Mar 2000)
Dorset's culture egg medium A medium for cultivating Mycobacterium tuberculosis; it consists of the whites and yolks of four fresh eggs and a solution of sodium chloride.
(05 Mar 2000)
isolecithal egg An egg in which the total amount of yolk is small and fairly uniformly distributed throughout the cytoplasm.
Synonym: isolecithal egg.
(05 Mar 2000)
telolecithal egg An egg containing a relatively large quantity of deutoplasm concentrated at the abapical pole; e.g., egg's of reptiles and birds.
(05 Mar 2000)
tertiary egg membrane See: egg membrane.
(05 Mar 2000)
egg A structure which the females of certain animal species lay as a means of reproduction, it contains a fertilized zygote and nutrition in the form of yolk for the developing offspring, sometimes contains other substances (e.g., the white of a hen's egg), sometimes surrounded by a protective outer shell.
(09 Oct 1997)
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