rust cement - meaning and definition. What is rust cement
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What (who) is rust cement - definition

ORDER OF FUNGI
Uredinales; Botany rust; Rust (botany); Rust (microbiology); Rust fungus; Blister rust; Cyclone separator; Rust fungi; Rust (disease); Pucciniales; Fungal rust
  • Germinating urediniospore of ''[[Puccinia graminis]]'', model from the late 19th century, [[Botanical Museum Greifswald]]

fibro         
  • Example of asbestos cement siding and lining on a post-war temporary house in Yardley, Birmingham. Nearly 40,000 of these structures were built between 1946 and 1949 to house families.
  • StateLibQld 2 152895 James Hardie and Wunderlich float ready for the Victory Day procession in Brisbane, 1946
BUILDING MATERIAL CONTAINING ASBESTOS
Fibrous Cement; Fibrous Asbestos Cement; Asbestos-cement; Fibrous cement; Fibro; Fibrolite (house cladding)
['f??br??]
¦ noun (plural fibros) Austral. a mixture of sand, cement, and cellulose fibre, used in sheets for building.
Fibre cement         
  • Older fibre cement roofing. [[Rammu]] island in Estonia
MATERIAL
Fiber cement; Fibro cement
Fibre cement is a composite building and construction material, used mainly in roofing and facade products because of its strength and durability. One common use is in fiber cement siding on buildings.
Sampyo Cement         
KOREAN CONCRETE COMPANY
Dongyang Cement
Sampyo Cement () is a South Korean cement, concrete and chemical company headquartered in Seoul. It produces portland cement products.

Wikipedia

Rust (fungus)

Rusts are plant diseases caused by pathogenic fungi of the order Pucciniales (previously known as Uredinales).

An estimated 168 rust genera and approximately 7,000 species, more than half of which belong to the genus Puccinia, are currently accepted. Rust fungi are highly specialized plant pathogens with several unique features. Taken as a group, rust fungi are diverse and affect many kinds of plants. However, each species has a very narrow range of hosts and cannot be transmitted to non-host plants. In addition, most rust fungi cannot be grown easily in pure culture.

A single species of rust fungi may be able to infect two different plant hosts in different stages of its life cycle, and may produce up to five morphologically and cytologically distinct spore-producing structures viz., spermogonia, aecia, uredinia, telia, and basidia in successive stages of reproduction. Each spore type is very host specific, and can typically infect only one kind of plant.

Rust fungi are obligate plant pathogens that only infect living plants. Infections begin when a spore lands on the plant surface, germinates, and invades its host. Infection is limited to plant parts such as leaves, petioles, tender shoots, stem, fruits, etc. Plants with severe rust infection may appear stunted, chlorotic (yellowed), or may display signs of infection such as rust fruiting bodies. Rust fungi grow intracellularly, and make spore-producing fruiting bodies within or, more often, on the surfaces of affected plant parts. Some rust species form perennial systemic infections that may cause plant deformities such as growth retardation, witch's broom, stem canker, galls, or hypertrophy of affected plant parts.

Rusts get their name because they are most commonly observed as deposits of powdery rust-coloured or brown spores on plant surfaces. The Roman agricultural festival Robigalia (April 25) has ancient origins in combating wheat rust.