stripe blight
Noun: A fungal disease affecting oat plants, characterized by the appearance of long, narrow, discolored streaks or stripes on the leaves and stems.
"Stripe blight" is a specific agricultural and botanical term. It is used as a countable noun, typically in the singular form when referring to the disease as a concept or category, and can be used in the plural when discussing multiple instances or outbreaks. * The oat crop was severely damaged by stripe blight. * Farmers are concerned about the spread of stripe blights in the region.
- The agronomist identified the symptoms as stripe blight.
- A wet spring can create ideal conditions for stripe blight to develop.
- Research is focused on developing oat varieties resistant to stripe blight.
The term is highly specialized and is primarily used in scientific, agricultural, and farming contexts. It is not commonly used in everyday language.
- Stripe (noun): A long, narrow band or strip differing in color or texture from the surface on either side of it. In plant pathology, it refers to the linear symptom.
- Blight (noun): A plant disease, typically one caused by fungi or bacteria, that results in withering, rotting, and death of parts of the plant without rotting of the entire plant.
- Leaf stripe: A related descriptive term for similar symptoms on other plants.
- Leaf stripe disease (specifically for oats)
- Oat stripe disease
"Stripe blight" does not have common idiomatic or figurative meanings. It retains its literal, technical meaning related to plant pathology.