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Green Algae (Chlorophyta)

Luettelo / Luonto / Elämä / Kasvit (Plantae) / Green Algae (Chlorophyta)
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Luettelo / Kulttuuri / Tiede / Biologia / Organism Biology / Botany / Taxonomy: Plants (Plantae) / Green Algae (Chlorophyta)

Charophyceae  [37]

Coniugatophyceae  [6]

Ulvophyceae  [209]

Chlorophyceae  [199]

Prasinophyceae  [15]

  

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Chlamydomonas NewsGroup
A hypermail archive of BIOSCI which is a set of free electronic communication forums - the bionet USENET newsgroups and parallel e-mail lists. [eng]
Spirogyra
Provides brief summary with images and pictures, links. Presented by Lukus Keelings. [eng]
Chlorophyta
Image Preview. [eng]
Chlorophyta indice
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Protist Images: Chlorophyta
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Desmids
Desmids are single celled green plants that are found living exclusively in freshwater habitats. They belong to the group of microscopic plants commonly known as Algae. They are frequently mentioned in pond life literature as they have a beauty, slowness and symmetry that appeals to most microscopists who examine such waters. [eng]
Introduction to the Green Algae
The "green algae" is the most diverse group of algae, with more than 7000 species growing in a variety of habitats. The "green algae" is a paraphyletic group because it excludes the Plantae. Like the plants, the green algae contain two forms of chlorophyll, which they use to capture light energy to fuel the manufacture of sugars, but unlike plants they are primarily aquatic. Because they are aquatic and manufacture their own food, these organisms are called "algae," along with certain members of the Chromista, the Rhodophyta, and photosynthetic bacteria, even though they do not share a close relationship with any of these groups. [eng]
Chlorophyta
Chloroplasten mit Chlorophyll a und b, daneben verschiedene akzessorische Pigmente, die jedoch die grüne Farbe nicht überdecken [deu]
Systematic tree of organisms: Green algae (Chlorophyta)
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Chlorophyta. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
The organisms are largely aquatic or marine. The various species can be unicellular, multicellular, coenocytic (having more than one nucleus in a cell), or colonial. Those that are motile have two apical or subapical flagella. A few types are terrestrial, occurring on moist soil, on the trunks of trees, on moist rocks, and even in snowbanks. [eng]
Algae Divisions - CHLOROPHYTA / Dept. Botany, NMNH, Smithsonian Institution
Most chlorophytes are aquatic, but some green algae can live on the surface of snow, on tree trunks, in soils, or symbiotically with protozoans, hydras or lichen-forming fungi. Numbering about 8,000 species, the chlorophytes range in size from microscopic to quite large. The typical color of plants in the Chlorophyta, resulting from the dominant chlorophyll pigments, is some shade of apple or grass green, although certain species may appear yellow-green or blackish-green due to the presence of carotenoid pigments or high concentrations of chlorophyll. Chlorophytes appear more than a billion years ago in the fossil record. [eng]
Images - Chlorophyta / Dept. Botany, NMNH, Smithsonian Institution
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