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  2. Chlamydomonas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chlamydomonas

    Chlamydomonas (/ ˌ k l æ m ɪ ˈ d ɒ m ə n ə s,-d ə ˈ m oʊ-/ KLAM-ih-DOM-ə-nəs, -⁠də-MOH-) is a genus of green algae consisting of about 150 species [2] of unicellular flagellates, found in stagnant water and on damp soil, in freshwater, seawater, and even in snow as "snow algae". [3]

  3. Chlamydomonadales - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chlamydomonadales

    Chlamydomonadales can form planar or spherical colonies. These vary from Gonium (four to 32 cells) up to Volvox (500 cells or more). Each cell has two flagella, and is similar in appearance to Chlamydomonas, with the flagella throughout the colony moving in coordination. [citation needed] Both asexual and sexual reproduction occur. In the ...

  4. Flagellate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flagellate

    Among protoctists and microscopic animals, a flagellate is an organism with one or more flagella. Some cells in other animals may be flagellate, for instance the spermatozoa of most animal phyla. Flowering plants do not produce flagellate cells, but ferns, mosses, green algae, and some gymnosperms and closely related plants do so. [2]

  5. Eustigmatophyte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eustigmatophyte

    Eustigmatophyte zoids possess a single or pair of flagella, originating from the apex of the cell. Unlike other heterokontophytes , eustigmatophyte zoids do not have typical photoreceptive organelles (or eyespots); instead an orange-red eyespot outside a chloroplast is located at the anterior end of the zoid.

  6. Dinoflagellate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dinoflagellate

    The flagella lie in surface grooves: the transverse one in the cingulum and the longitudinal one in the sulcus, although its distal portion projects freely behind the cell. In dinoflagellate species with desmokont flagellation (e.g., Prorocentrum), the two flagella are differentiated as in dinokonts, but they are not associated with grooves.

  7. Volvocaceae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volvocaceae

    In the genus Gonium, for example, each individual organism is a flat plate consisting of 4 to 16 separate cells, each with two flagella. Similarly, the genera Eudorina and Pandorina form hollow spheres, the former consisting of 16 cells, the latter of 32 to 64 cells. In these genera each cell can reproduce a new organism by mitosis. [2] Volvox sp.

  8. Chaetosphaeridium globosum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaetosphaeridium_globosum

    Chaetosphaeridium globosum is a one-celled alga which is thought to represent an ancient lineage of the green plants. This organism exists in a filamentous form with one flagella per cell. It is a freshwater species. The flagellum is covered in scales in a 3-prong irregular shape called ‘maple leafs’.

  9. Chlamydomonadaceae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chlamydomonadaceae

    Traditionally, it has been defined as containing single-celled flagellates with a cell wall. [2] Cells of the Chlamydomonadaceae are motile and have one, two, or four flagella. The cell body is covered in a cell wall, with the protoplast entirely or partially lined up next to the wall. Cells are uninucleate (i.e. with one nucleus).

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