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Algae Notes

This document summarizes the plant kingdom and describes various types of algae. It begins by defining the plant kingdom and its major divisions. It then discusses three types of plant classification systems. The rest of the document focuses on describing different characteristics of algae, including their structure, reproduction, economic importance, and classification into the three main algal divisions of Chlorophyceae, Phaeophyceae, and Rhodophyceae.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
295 views3 pages

Algae Notes

This document summarizes the plant kingdom and describes various types of algae. It begins by defining the plant kingdom and its major divisions. It then discusses three types of plant classification systems. The rest of the document focuses on describing different characteristics of algae, including their structure, reproduction, economic importance, and classification into the three main algal divisions of Chlorophyceae, Phaeophyceae, and Rhodophyceae.

Uploaded by

saikatmajee727
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Plant kingdom

• This kingdom deals with algae, bryophyte, pteridophyte, gymnosperm and angiosperm
• Previously Fungi and members of the Monera and protista was placed under plant kingdom due to
presence of their cell wall
• But at present they have been excluded from Plantae
• Cyanobacteria previously referred as cyanophyceae and placed under plantae but now a days they
are called as cyanobacteria and included under Monera
Types of classification
There are three types
• Artificial classification:
➢ It is based on morphological characters such as habit, colour, number and shape of
leaves.
➢ It gives equal weightage to vegetative and sexual characters
➢ Most of the earliest classification are of this types
Example: Linnaeus system of classification ( based on androecium structure)
Drawback:
➢ vegetative characters are more easily affected by environment
➢ Closely related species are separated from each other

• Natural system of classification:


➢ it is based on natural affinities and consider not only the external features, but also internal
features like ultrastructure, and, embryology and phytochemistry
Example: Bentham and Hooker classification
Drawback: can not correlate the evolutionary sequence`
Advantage: easy identification

• Phylogenetic classification:
➢ based on evolutionary relationships between various organisms
➢ This system assumes that organisms belonging to the same taxa have a common ancestor
Example: Takhtajan classification, Engler -Prantil classification, Hutchinson classification
Advantage: evolutionary relationships can be identified
The origin of organisms can be identified without supporting of fossil evidence

Branches of taxonomy:
Numerical taxonomy: it involves uses of numerical methods for the evolution of similarities and differences
between species with the help of computers
Steps:
1. Numbers and codes are assigned to all observable characters like(+) and (-), data not available
as(0)
2. All possible characters are compared by computers by giving equal importance
3. The organisation and analysis of data forms core of this taxonomy
Advantage: many characters can be considered at the same time

Cytotaxonomy: based on psychological information like chromosome number, structure, behaviour


Chemotaxonomy: based on chemical constituent of the plants
Example: DNA sequence, aromatic compounds etc

Algae

• They are chlorophyll bearing, simple, thalloid, autotrophic and largely aquatic organism
• The term algae was given by Linnaeus
• Phycology: study of algae
• Father of phycology: Fristch

• The form and size of algae is highly variable


➢ Unicelluar: Chlamydomonas, Chlorella, Spirulina
➢ Colonial: Volvox
➢ Filamentous:
Unbranched: Spirogyra, Ulothrix,
Branched: Ectocarpus
➢ Parenchymatous: Laminaria, Fucus, Dictyota
• Majority are aquatic
• Some may gorw in moist stones, soils, wood
• Some of them may occur in association with fungi (lichen) and animal (on sloth bear).
• Fresh water: Chlamydomonas, Volvox
• Marine: Porphyra, Laminaria, Sargassum
• Some may grow in association with fungi ( lichen) and animals ( sloth bear)
• Vascular tissue is absent
• Embryo not formed
• Sex organs non jacketed and unicellular ( exception Chara)
• Reproduce by vegetative asexual and sexual methods
• Vegetative reproduction: by fragmentaion
• Asexual reproduction takes place by zoospore, aplanospores, hypnospore, akinete
• Sexual reproduction is of
• Isogamy: fusion between two similar gametes. Gametes maybe motile (
Chlamydomonas,Ulothrix) or nonmotile (conjugation in Spirogyra)
• Anisogamy: fusion of two gametes of dissimilar size (some species of Chlamydomonas, e.g.
C.braunii),Udorina
• Oogamy: fusion between small motile male gamete and large non motile female gamete (Volvox,
Fucus) . This type of reproduction is also reported In Polysiphonia, Porphyra, Gracilaria, Gelidium

Economic importance of algae:


• Half of the total CO2 fixed by photosynthesis is carried out by algae.
• As food: 70 species of marine in algae including Porphyra, Laminaria, Sargassum
• Hydrocolloids: algin from brown algae, carrageen from red algae. Agar mainly produced from
Gelidium, Gracilaria . Agar used as solidifying agent in the preparation of ice cream and jelly
• Protein source: Chlorella, Spirulina. These are also used as food supplements by space travellers
• Iodine: Fucus, Laminaria
• They also increase level of dissolved oxygen

Classification of algae:
Basis: flagellation, pigment, cell wall composition, storage food

Chlorophyceae:
• Commonly called green algae
• Plant body maybe
• unicellular: Chlamydomonas, Chlorella
• Colonial: Volvox
• Filamentous:
o branched: Cladophora
o unbranched: Spirogyra, Ulothrix,
• Pigment: chlorophyll a and b, ( chlorophyll b imparts the grass green colour). Pigments are
localised in chloroplast
• Chloroplast:
o spiral: Spirogyra
o cup shaped: Chlamydomonas
o reticulate: Oedogonium
• Storage food: starch located in pyrinoid wich located in chloroplast. Pyrinoid also store protein.
Some also store oil droplets
• Cell wall: inner cellulosic, outer pectic
• Flagellation: 2 to 8 equal flagella located on a apical side
• Oedogonium have many flagella
• Reproduction:
• Vegetative reproduction: fragmentation
• Asexual reproduction: by zoospores produced within zoosporangia
• Sexual reproduction: isogamy anisogamy and oogamy
• Example: Chlamydomonas, Volvox, Ulothrix, Spirogyra, Chara
Phaeophyceae:
• Commonly called brown algae
• Plant body may be
• Simple branched, filamentous: Ectocarpus
• Large massive (kelp): Fucus, Sargassum
• They are primarily marine
• Pigment: chlorophyll a,c, carotene and xanthohyll (Fucoxanthin, gives the brown colour)
• Storage food: laminarin, mannitol (sugar alochol)
• Cell wall: inner cellulosic outer gelatinous coating of algin
• Plant body is differentiated into
Hold fast: attached to the substratum
Stalk
Stipe
Frond: help in photosynthesis
• Flagellation: biflagellate zoospores that have are pear shaped and have two unequally laterally
attached flagella
• Reproduction: isogamy (Ectocarpus), anisogamy or oogamy (Fucus)
• In isogamy and anisogamy fertilization is external whereas in oogamy fertilization is internal
• Gametes: similar to zoospore
• Example: Ectocarpus, Dictyota, Laminaria, Sargassum, Fucus

Rhodophyceae
• Members are commonly called red algae
• Majority are marine, mainly found in warmer areas
• Pigment: chlorophyll a, d, r-phycierythrine,(impart the red colour)
• Occurs in well lighted regions close to the surface of water and also at great depth in oceans where
relatively little light penetrates
• They are multicellular
• Reserve food: floridian starch ( similar to amylopectin and glycogen)
• Cell wall: inner cellulosic and outer pectic (agar)
• Flagella: absent
• Reproduction
➢ Vegetative reproduction: fragmentation
➢ Asexual reproduction: buy non motile spore
➢ Sexual reproduction: oogamous, by non motile gametes
➢ Complex post fertilization development exist
➢ Example: Polysiphonia, Porphyra, Gelidium, Gracilaria

Note:
➢ Ulothrix exhibit origin of sexual reproduction
➢ Evolution of sex is best studied in chlorophyceae
➢ Calvin cycle discovered by experimenting in Chlorella
➢ Largest algae: Acetabularia (chlorophyceae)
➢ Chlorellin antibiotic obtained from Chlorella
➢ Parasitic alga: Cephaleuros cause red rust of tea
➢ Motile cells are completely in Rhodophyceae
➢ Fucus have air bladder in their frond
➢ In Volvox daughter colony is produced within parent colony by production of gonidia
➢ Chlamydomonas have two whiplash equal flagella paced anteriorly.
➢ Chara have multicellular jacketed sex organ. The male sex organ is called globule and the female
sex organ is called nucule. Nucule placed above the globule in secondary laterals.
➢ In Chara, the cell wall have high amount of silica, and hence Chara is also called stone wart.

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