| Microbiology, 5/e Lansing M Prescott,
Augustana College Donald A Klein,
Colorado State University John P Harley,
Eastern Kentucky University
The Algae
Study Outline- Introduction
- Algae-not a monophyletic group; instead the term is used to describe a group of organisms that lack roots, stems, and leaves, but that have chlorophyll and other pigments for carrying out oxygenic photosynthesis
- Phycologists (algologists)-scientists who study algae
- Phycology (algology)-the study of algae
- Distribution of Algae
- Primarily aquatic
- Planktonic-suspended in the aqueous environment
- Phytoplankton-algae and other small aquatic plants
- Zooplankton-animals and other nonphotosynthetic protists
- Benthic-attached and living on the bottom of a body of water
- Neustonic-living at the air-water interface
- Moist rocks, wood, trees, and soil
- Some are endosymbionts in protozoa, mollusks, worms, corals, and plants
- Some associate with fungi to form lichens
- Some are parasitic
- Classification of Algae
- In the Whittaker system
- Divided into seven divisions within two different kingdoms
- Primary classification is based on cellular properties
- Cell wall (if present) chemistry and morphology
- Storage food and photosynthetic products
- Types of chlorophyll and accessory pigments
- Number of flagella and their insertion location
- Morphology of cells and/or thallus (body)
- Habitat
- Reproductive structures
- Life history patterns
- Molecular systems have reclassified the algae as polyphyletic; they fall into five different lineages
- Plants
- Red algae
- Stramenopiles (this lineage also includes some protozoa)
- Alveolates (this lineage also includes some protozoa)
- Amoeboflagellates (this lineage also includes some protozoa)
- Ultrastructure of the Algal Cell
- Surrounded by a thin, rigid cell wall (some also have an outer matrix)
- Some are motile by flagella
- The nucleus has a typical nuclear envelope with pores
- Chloroplasts have thylakoids (sacs) that are the site of photosynthetic light reactions; may also have a dense proteinaceous pyrenoid that is associated with the synthesis and storage of starch
- Mitochondria can have discoid cristae, lamellar cristae, or tubular cristae
- Algal Nutrition
- Most are autotrophic-require only light and inorganic compounds for energy; use CO2 as carbon source
- Some are heterotrophic-use external organic materials as source of energy and carbon
- Structure of the Algal Thallus (Vegetative Form)
- Thallus-vegetative body of algae; can be unicellular or multicellular
- Algae can be unicellular, colonial, filamentous, membranous, or tubular
- Algal Reproduction
- Asexual-occurs only with unicellular algae
- Fragmentation-thallus breaks up and each fragment forms a new thallus
- Spores formed in ordinary vegetative cell or in sporangium
- Zoospores are flagellated motile spores
- Aplanospores are nonmotile spores
- Binary fission-nuclear division followed by cytoplasmic division
- Sexual-occurs in multicellular and unicellular algae
- Oogonia-relatively unmodified vegetative cells in which eggs are formed
- Antheridia-specialized structures in which sperm are formed
- Zygote-product of fusion of sperm and egg
- Characteristics of the Algal Divisions
- Chlorophyta (green algae)-molecular classification places these with plants
- Are extremely varied
- Contain chlorophylls a and b and carotenoids; store carbohydrate as starch; cell walls are made of cellulose
- Live in fresh and salt water, soil, and associated with other organisms
- Can be unicellular, colonial, filamentous, membranous, or tubular
- Exhibit both asexual and sexual reproduction
- Genus Chlamydomonas-Members of this genus are microscopic, rounded, with two flagella at anterior end; have single haploid nucleus, a large chloroplast with conspicuous pyrenoid for starch production and storage, a stigma (phototactic eyespot), and contractile vacuole (acts as osmoregulator); exhibit asexual reproduction (zoospores) and sexual reproduction
- Genus Chlorella-members of this genus are nonmotile, unicellular algae; are widespread in aquatic habitats and in soil; only reproduce asexually; lack flagella; have eyespots, contractile vacuoles, and a very small nucleus
- Genus Volvox-members of the genus exist as hollow spheres made up of a single layer of 500-60,000 flagellated cells; flagella beat in a coordinated fashion; some cells are specialized for reproduction
- Prototheca moriformis, which is common in soil, causes the disease protothecosis in humans and other animals
- Charophyta (stoneworts/brittleworts)
- Abundant in fresh and brackish waters; worldwide distribution
- Some species precipitate calcium and magnesium carbonate from water to form a limestone covering (helps preserve them as fossils)
- Euglenophyta (euglenoids)-molecular classification places these with amoeboflagellates
- Same chlorophylls (a and b) as Chlorophyta and Charophyta; found in fresh and brackish waters and in moist soils
- Genus Euglena-members of this genus:
- Have elongated cells bounded by a plasma membrane; inside the plasma membrane is a pellicle (articulated proteinaceous strips lying side-by-side), which is elastic enough to enable turning and flexing of the cell, yet rigid enough to prevent excessive alterations in cell shape
- Have a stigma located near an anterior reservoir
- Have a large contractile vacuole, which collects water and empties it into the reservoir for osmotic regulation
- Have paired flagella at anterior end that arise from reservoir base; only one beats to move the cell
- Reproduce by longitudinal mitotic cell division
- Chrysophyta (golden-brown and yellow-green algae and diatoms)-molecular classification places these with the stramenopiles
- Divided into three classes: golden-brown algae, yellow-green algae, and diatoms
- Contain chlorophylls a and c1/c2, and the carotenoid fucoxanthin
- Major carbohydrate reserve is chrysolaminarin
- Some lack cell walls; some have intricately patterned scales on the plasma membrane; diatoms have a distinctive two-piece wall of silica called a frustule; have zero, one, or two flagella (of equal or unequal length)
- Most are unicellular or colonial; reproduction is usually asexual, but occasionally sexual
- Diatoms are photosynthetic, circular or oblong cells with overlapping silica shells (epitheca-larger half and hypotheca-smaller half)
- Grow in aquatic habitats and moist soil
- Some are faculatative heterotrophs
- Vegetative cells are diploid and reproduce asexually with each daughter getting one old theca and constructing one new theca; this type of reproduction results in diatoms getting progressively smaller with each reproductive cycle; when diminished to 30% of original size, sexual reproduction occurs
- Phaeophyta (brown algae)-molecular classification places these with stramenopiles
- Multicellular seaweeds; some species have the largest linear dimensions known in the eucaryotic world
- Simplest species have branched filaments; more complex species (kelps) are differentiated into flattened blades, stalks, and holdfast organs that anchor them to rocks
- Contain chlorophylls a and c; carotenoids include fucoxanthin, violaxanthin, and b-carotene
- Rhodophyta (red algae)-molecular classification gives these a separate lineage
- Some are unicellular, but most are multicellular, filamentous seaweeds; comprise most of the seaweeds
- Carbohydrate reserve is floridean starch
- Contain phycoerythrin (red pigment) and phycocyanin (blue pigment), and can therefore live in deeper waters
- Their cell walls include a rigid inner part composed of microfibrils and a mucilaginous matrix consisting of sulfated polymers of galactose (agar); many also deposit calcium carbonate in their cell walls and contribute to coral reef formation
- Pyrrhophyta (dinoflagellates)-molecular classification places these with the alveolates
- Unicellular, photosynthetic protists
- Most are marine organisms but a few are freshwater dwellers; some are responsible for phosphorescence in ocean waters and for toxic red tides
- Their flagella and protective coats are distinctive
- Are clad in stiff, patterned, cellulose plates (thecae)
- Most have two perpendicular flagella that function in a manner that causes organism to spin
- Contain chlorophylls a and c, carotenoids, and xanthophylls
- Some can ingest other cells; some are heterotrophic; some are endosymbiotic, living within host cells where they lose their cellulose plates and flagella (zooxanthellae)
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