fucoid
English
Etymology
Ancient Greek φῦκος (phûkos, “seaweed”).
Adjective
fucoid (comparative more fucoid, superlative most fucoid)
- Resembling or relating to seaweeds of the genus Fucus.
- 2001, S. Bisgrove and D. Kropf, Asymmetric cell division in fucoid algae, in the Journal of Cell Science, No. 114, 4319-4328
- The first cell division in zygotes of the fucoid brown alga Pelvetia compressa is asymmetric […]
- 2001, S. Bisgrove and D. Kropf, Asymmetric cell division in fucoid algae, in the Journal of Cell Science, No. 114, 4319-4328
- Of sandstone: bearing seaweed-like markings.
- Calcareous siltstone, Cambrian Fucoid Beds, earth.ox.ac.uk webpage
- The Fucoid beds are quite variable in appearance in composition […] The rock unit got its name from the early belief that these markings were the compressed remains of seaweeds (fucoids). Now it is thought that they are the trails left by feeding creatures on the sea floor.
- Calcareous siltstone, Cambrian Fucoid Beds, earth.ox.ac.uk webpage
Noun
fucoid (plural fucoids)
- A fucoid seaweed.
- 1910, Arthur Hollick, A New Fossil Fucoid
- Among a number of unidentified specimens […] was one of an unusually well-defined, almost perfect frond of a fucoid.
- 1910, Arthur Hollick, A New Fossil Fucoid
Related terms
- fucoidan
- fucoxanthin
- fucus
- Fucus
Further reading
Fucus on Wikipedia.Wikipedia Fucoidan on Wikipedia.Wikipedia Fucales on Wikipedia.Wikipedia