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  2. Volvox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volvox

    Volvox is a polyphyletic genus of chlorophyte green algae in the family Volvocaceae. Volvox species form spherical colonies of up to 50,000 cells, and for this reason they are sometimes called globe algae .

  3. Volvox carteri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volvox_carteri

    Volvox carteri [1] is a species of colonial green algae in the order Volvocales. [2] The V. carteri life cycle includes a sexual phase and an asexual phase.V. carteri forms small spherical colonies, or coenobia, of 2000–6000 Chlamydomonas-type somatic cells and 12–16 large, potentially immortal reproductive cells called gonidia. [3]

  4. Volvocaceae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volvocaceae

    Volvocine algae range from the unicellular Chlamydomonas to the multicellular Volvox through various intermediate forms and are used as a model for research into the evolution of multicellularity. The spheroidal colony is thought to have evolved twice independently within this group: once in the Volvocaceae, from Pandorina to Volvox, and the ...

  5. Green algae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_algae

    Volvox is a genus of chlorophytes. Different species form spherical colonies of up to 50,000 cells. Different species form spherical colonies of up to 50,000 cells. One well-studied species, Volvox carteri (2,000 – 6,000 cells) occupies temporary pools of water that tend to dry out in the heat of late summer.

  6. Volvox globator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volvox_globator

    Volvox globator is a species of green algae of the genus Volvox. It was originally described by Carl Linnaeus in his 1758 work Systema Naturae . [ 1 ] In 1856 its sexuality was described by Ferdinand Cohn and is the same as Sphaeroplea annulina . [ 2 ]

  7. Algae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Algae

    In Systema Naturae, Linnaeus described the genera Volvox and Corallina, and a species of Acetabularia (as Madrepora), among the animals. In 1768, Samuel Gottlieb Gmelin (1744–1774) published the Historia Fucorum, the first work dedicated to marine algae and the first book on marine biology to use the then new binomial nomenclature of Linnaeus ...

  8. Chlamydomonas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chlamydomonas

    The name Chlamydomonas comes from the Greek roots chlamys, meaning cloak or mantle, and monas, meaning solitary, now used conventionally for unicellular flagellates. [ 8 ] Description

  9. Chaos (genus) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaos_(genus)

    Amoebas and Volvox from Rösel von Rosenhof, 1755 Amoebas from C.G. Ehrenberg, 1830. The genus Chaos has had a long and often confusing history. In 1755, Rösel von Rosenhof saw and depicted an amoeboid he named "der kleine Proteus" ("the little Proteus"). [11] Three years later, Linnaeus gave Rösel's creature the name Volvox chaos.