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dry rot
(redirected from Dryrot)

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dry rot, fungus disease that attacks both softwood and hardwood timber. Destruction of the cellulose causes discoloration and eventual crumbling of the wood. This frequently results in the collapse of wooden structures such as house flooring, mine shafts, and ship hulls. Because the fungi require moisture for growth, dry rot occurs most often in places where the ventilation is poor or humidity is high or when the wood has been improperly seasoned. In the United States it is most frequently caused by a pore fungus (Poria incrassata) and by the dry-rot, or house, fungus (Merulis lacrymans). It may be prevented by application of creosote or other preservatives. Dry rot sometimes attacks standing conifers. The name is also used for other fungus diseases that attack the roots or stems of plants (see diseases of plants diseases of plants. Most plant diseases are caused by fungi, bacteria, and viruses. Although the term disease is usually used only for the destruction of live plants, the action of dry rot and the rotting of harvested crops in storage or transport is similar
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dry rot

Symptom of fungal disease in plants (see fungus), characterized by firm spongy to leathery or hard decay of the stem (branch), trunk, root, rhizome, corm, bulb, or fruit. The fungus consumes the cellulose of wood, leaving a soft skeleton that is readily reduced to powder.


dry rot
1. crumbling and drying of timber, bulbs, potatoes, or fruit, caused by saprotrophic basidiomycetous fungi
2. any fungus causing this decay, esp of the genus Merulius

dry rot [′drī ‚rät]
(microbiology)
A rapid decay of seasoned timber caused by certain fungi which cause the wood to be reduced to a dry, friable texture.
(plant pathology)
Any of various rot diseases of plants characterized by drying of affected tissues.

dry rot
The decay of seasoned wood caused by fungi of a type capable of carrying water into the wood they infest.


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An economic backlash and a general disgust for duck ponds, moats, and dryrot mean Gordon Brown's number is up, bar a miracle.
Indoor nests, which may be satellite colonies of larger, outside ones, are sometimes bored into wooden parts of a building or furniture, causing structural damage--oftentimes to locales already compromised by decay or dryrot.
 
 
 
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