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Multicellular Algae

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Title: Multicellular Algae


1
Multicellular Algae
  • Kingdom Protista
  • Developed by Adam F Sprague
  • Dave Werner

2
Characteristics of Algae
  • Plantlike members of the kingdom Protista
  • Eukaryotes
  • Most unicellular, but some multicellular
  • Autotrophic contain chlorophyll make food by
    photosynthesis
  • Planktonic
  • Produce oxygen
  • microscopic to seaweeds hundreds of feet in
    length
  • Do not have true roots, stems, nor leaves
  • Form gametes (eggs sperm) in single-celled
    gametangia (chambers) instead of multicellular
    gametangia like true plants
  • Found in freshwater, marine, and moist soil
    habitats
  • Most have flagella at some time in life cycle
  • Algae cells contain organelles called pyrenoids
    organelles that make store starch

3
 Structure of Algal Cells
  • The body of algae is called the thallus 
  • Algae may  be unicellular, colonial, filamentous,
    or multicellular
  • Unicellular algae are single-celled make up
    phytoplankton (a population of photosynthetic
    organisms that begins many aquatic food chains)
  • Phytoplankton make much world's carbohydrates
    are the major producers of oxygen

4
Structure of Seaweeds
  • Filamentous algae have slender, rod-shaped
    thallus arranged in rows joined end-to-end
  • Holdfasts are specialized structures in some
    filamentous algae that attaches the algae so it
    can grow toward sunlight at the surface

5
Structure of Seaweeds
  • Multicellular algae often have a large, complex
    leaf-like thallus may have stem-like sections
    and air bladders called pneumatocysts
  •  Macrocystis is among the largest multicellular
    algae

6
Structure of algae vs. seagrass
7
Filamentous algae Enteromorpha
8
Multicellular algae Macrocystis
9
Classification
  • Algae are classified into 3 phyla, based on
    color, type of chlorophyll, form of food-storage
    substance, and cell wall composition
  • All phyla contain chlorophyll a
  • Many species of algae reproduce sexually and
    asexually
  • Sexual reproduction in algae is often triggered
    by environmental stress

10
Chlorophyta (green Algae) 7000 species
  • May be unicellular, multicellular, or colonial
  • Include Spirogyra, Ulva, Chlamydomonas
  • Contain chlorophyll a chlorophyll b and
    carotenoids (orange yellow pigments) as
    accessory pigments
  • Store food as starch
  • Cell cellulose, some add CaCO3
  • Habitat -freshwater, moist surfaces, or marine
    environments
  • Some have whip-like flagella for movement
  • May live symbiotically as lichens
  • Thought to have given rise to terrestrial plants

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12
Phaeophyta (brown algae) 1500 species
  • Contain chlorophyll a chlorophyll c and
    fucoxanthin (brown pigment) as accessory pigments
  • Most multicellular- growing in cooler marine
    habitats
  • Includes kelps seaweeds
  • Largest protists
  • Specialized rootlike holdfasts
  • Specialized air bladders
  • Stemlike structures are called the stipe
  • Store food as a carbohydrate called laminarin
  • Include Laminaria Fucus

13
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14
Rhodophyta (red algae) 4000 species
  • Multicellular algae that mainly grow deep in warm
    marine waters
  • Some freshwater species exist
  • Highly branched thallus
  • Contain chlorophyll a phycobilins (red
    pigments) to trap sunlight
  • Store food as starch
  • Cell walls contain cellulose and agar (used as a
    base in culture dishes to grow microbes)
  • Some species contain carageenan in their cell
    walls used for gelatin capsules in some cheeses

15
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16
Common Marine algae of Barnegat Bay
17
Enteromorpha
18
Ulva lactuca(Sea Lettuce)
19
Agardhiella
20
Fucus(rockweed)
21
spongomorpha
22
Sargassum
A closeup of a small mass of sargassum weed. The
numerous small round spheres are floats filled
with carbon dioxide. These provide buoyancy to
the algae.
23
There are numerous types of marine algae found
throughout our back bay areas, this has just been
a sample of what you will find.
24
Diatom Reproductionfig. 5.6
  • Asexual Cell Division into Auxospores
  • Produces Blooms
  • Sexual Egg Sperm

25
Reproduction in Unicellular Algae Bio book p.528
  • Asexual Phase
  • Algae absorbs its flagellum
  • Haploid algal cell then divides mitotically from
    2 to 3 times
  • From 4 - 8  haploid flagellated cells called
    zoospores develop in this parent cell
  • Zoospores break out of the parent cell
    eventually grow to full size

26
Sexual Phase
  • Haploid cells dividing mitotically to produce
    either plus or minus gametes
  • A plus gamete and a minus gamete come into
    contact with one another, shed their cell walls,
    and fuse to form a diploid zygote
  • This resting stage of a zygote is called a
    zygospore can withstand bad environmental
    conditions
  • When conditions are bad, the thick wall opens and
    the living zoospore emerges

27
Chlamydomonas
28
Reproduction in Multicellular Algae
  • Oedogonium is a multicellular, filamentous green
    algae with specialized cells called gametangia
    that form gametes
  • The male gametangia or antheridium makes sperm,
    the female gametangia or oogonium makes eggs
  • Sperm are released into the water swim to the
    egg to fertilize them
  • The fertilized egg or zygote is released from the
    oogonium forms thick-walled zoospores
  • Zoospores undergo meiosis so one cell attaches to
    the bottom develops a holdfast while the other
    zoospores divide form a filament

29
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30
Spirogyra, another filamentous green algae,
reproduces by conjugation
31
Two filaments align side by side, their adjacent
cell walls dissolve, a conjugation tube forms
between them Fertilization occurs when a
gamete cell moves through the tube fuses to the
- gamete cell  Zygote forms a thick walled spore
(sporangium) that breaks away from the parent
forms a new filament Conjugation Tube between
Spirogyra
32
Ulva fig.6.11
  • The leaflike algae Ulva has a sexual reproductive
    cycle characterized by a pattern called
    alternation of generations
  •  Alternation of generations has two distinct
    multicellular phases- a haploid, gamete-producing
    phase called a gametophyte and a diploid,
    spore-producing phase called a sporophyte
  • Alternation of Generation also occurs in more
    complex land plants, but the gametophyte
    sporophyte do not resemble each other

33
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