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Thallus (pl.: thalli), from Latinized Greek θαλλός (thallos), meaning "a green shoot" or "twig", is the vegetative tissue of some organisms in diverse groups such as algae, fungi, some liverworts, lichens, and the Myxogastria.
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 (tissue) consists of fine branched filaments each with a central axial filament supporting pericentral cells. [7] The number of these pericentral cells (4–24) is used in identification. [8] [9] [10] Polysiphonia elongata [11] shows a central axial cell with 4 periaxial cells with cortical cells growing over the outside on the ...
A byssoid lichen has a wispy, cottony or teased wool appearance due to the loosely woven hyphae in its thallus. [13] It has no outer cortex. [14] Lichens with this growth type can be split into two types. In one type, the thallus is dominated by fungal hyphae, with a photobiont – typically a coccoid green alga – sprinkled throughout. In the ...
Pallaviciniaceae is a widely distributed family of liverworts in the order Pallaviciniales.All species are thallose, typically organized as a thick central costa (midvein), each side with a broad wing of tissue one cell in thickness.
Ectocarpus is a genus of filamentous brown alga that includes a model organism for the genomics of multicellularity. [1] [2] Among possible model organisms in the brown algae, Ectocarpus was selected for the relatively small size of its mature thallus and the speed with which it completes its life cycle.
In a classification presented by van den Hoek, Mann and Jahns (1995), based on the level of organization of the thallus, there are seven orders: Order Chloramoebales (e.g., Chloromeson) - flagellate organisms; Order Rhizochloridales (e.g., Rhizochloris, Myxochloris) - ameboid organisms
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]