Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Caulerpa is coenocytic, meaning it has a multinucleate thallus organization. It is also siphonous, meaning unlike other algae, the thallus and the nuclei are not separated by cell walls. They are instead one long mass of protoplasm surrounded by a single cell wall. [12]
A kelp, for example, may have its thallus divided into three regions. The parts of a kelp thallus include the holdfast (anchor), stipe (supports the blades) and the blades (for photosynthesis). [2] The thallus of a fungus is usually called a mycelium. The term thallus is also commonly used to refer to the vegetative body of a lichen.
Siphonocladus tropicus showing segregative cell division. Siphonocladus is a small genus of green algae in the family Siphonocladaceae. [1] [2] The algal body is composed of long, club-shaped cells that divide by segregative cell division, followed by the formation of branches that break through the mother cell.
Several kelp laminae. The lamina or blade in macroscopic algae, like seaweed, is a generally flattened structure that typically forms the principal bulk of the thallus. [1] It is often developed into specialised organs such as flotation bladders and reproductive organs.
The thallus is perennial with an irregular or disc-shaped holdfast or with haptera. [1] The erect portion of the thallus is dichotomous or subpinnately branched, flattened and with a distinct midrib. Gas-filled pneumatocysts (air-vesicles) are present in pairs in some species, one on either side of the midrib.
The thallus is filamentous, highly branched, and may be packed into a mass. It is coenocytic , having multi-nucleate cells consisting of cytoplasm contained within a cylindrical cell wall . There are no septae , and the many discoid chloroplasts, nuclei and other organelles are free to move through the organism.
Ectocarpus is a filamentous alga that can grow up to 30 cm. Cultured specimens in the laboratory tend to be fertile when they are 1–3 cm in length. Ectocarpus has a normal, branched appearance in unialgal cultures, but in axenic cultures it has a ball-shaped appearance suggesting that bacterial symbionts are required for the alga to attain ...
The thallus, or body, of this algae is a hollow, torpedo-shaped sac. This ellipsoid shape has low drag through the water allowing the algae to inhabit areas with significant wave and current energy. [4] The sac is reddish-purple to yellowish-brown in color. It can be as long as 15 centimetres (5.9 in), but is usually shorter.