Pictures from Google Image Search

Algae

Plant Sciences | 2001 | | Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Algae

Scientists' concepts of which organisms should be termed algae (alga, singular; algae, plural; algal, adjective) have changed radically over the past two centuries. The term algae originally referred to almost all aquatic, photosynthetic organisms. But, as more has been learned about the evolutionary

EUKARYOTIC ALGAE
Division Common Name Pigments Habitats General Morphology
Glaucophyta Chlorophyll a Freshwater Unicellular flagellates
Phycocyanin
Rhodophyta Red algae Chlorophyll a Mostly marine Unicells, filaments, thalli; no flagellated stages; some calcified, some mucilaginous
Phycoerythrin
Phycocyanin
Cryptophyta Cryptomonads Chlorophyll a Marine and freshwater Mostly unicells
Chlorophyll c
Phycocyanin
Phycoerythrin
Heterokontophyta
(Ochrophyta)
Chrysophyceae Golden brown algae Chlorophyll a Freshwater Mostly unicells or colonies; biflagellate
Chlorophyll c
Fucoxanthin
Xanthophyceae Chlorophyll Chlorophyll a Mostly freshwater and terrestrial; some marine Coccoid, flagellate, or amoeboid unicells; colonies, uni- and multinucleate filaments; biflagellate
(Tribophyceae) Chlorophyll c
Eustigmatophyceae Chlorophyll a Freshwater and marine Unicells and coccoid; uni- or biflagellate
Violaxanthin
Bacillariophyceae Diatoms Chlorophyll a Freshwater and marine Unicells and colonial coccoids; no flagella
Chlorophyll c
Fucoxanthin
Raphidophyceae Chlorophyll a Freshwater and marine Unicellular biflagellates
Chlorophyll c
Fucoxanthin (Marine species only)
Diadinoxanthin
Vaucheriaxanthin
Heteroxanthin
Dictyochophyceae Silicoflagellates Chlorophyll a Marine Unicellular uniflagellates
Chlorophyll c
Fucoxanthin
Phaeophyceae Brown algae Chlorophyll a Marine Multicellular; reproductive cells biflagellate
Chlorophyll c
Fucoxanthin
Dinophyta (Pyrrhophyta) Dinoflagellates Chlorophyll a Mostly marine Mostly unicells, some coccoids and filaments; biflagellate
Chlorophyll c
Haptophyta Chlorophyll a Mostly marine Unicellular biflagellates
Chlorophyll c
Euglenophyta Euglenoids Chlorophyll a Mostly freshwater Unicellular uniflagellates
Chlorophyll b
Chlorophyta Green algae Chlorophyll a
Chlorophyll b
Prasinophyceae Marine and freshwater Unicells; 1-8 flagella
Chlorophyceae Mostly freshwater; some terrestrial and marine Unicellular, coccoid, or colonial flagellates; multicellular or multinucleate filaments; bi- or tetraflagellate
Ulvophyceae Marine or subaerial Uni- or multicellular or multinucleate filaments; reproductive cells bi-or tetraflagellate
Pleurastrophyceae Subaerial Coccoid or filament; reproductive cells biflagellate
Charophyceae Stoneworts or brittleworts; desmids Fresh or brackish water or subaerial Coccoid or filament, reproductive cells biflagellate or with no flagella; or multinucleate cells, complex thalli with biflagellate male gametes

history of algae, which spans at least five hundred million years, the definition has narrowed considerably. For instance, the assemblage of organisms traditionally called the blue-green algae will not be discussed here. These organisms are now known as cyanobacteria , a name that more accurately reflects their nature as prokaryotes . The algae are now generally considered to include only eukaryotic organisms.

Even after narrowing the group by excluding cyanobacteria, a succinct, precise definition of algae is not really possible. It would be accurate to say that algae are eukaryotic, photosynthetic autotrophs (and their colorless relatives), and that most are aquatic (there are some terrestrial species). The algae include organisms ranging in size from the microscopic to those reaching lengths as tall as a six-story building (e.g., the giant kelp, Macrocystis, which exists off the California coast), but no species of alga achieves the morphological complexity of true land plants; furthermore, sexual reproduction in algae is completely different than that of true land plants. Although not as beautiful to most people as roses and redwood trees, the algae are arguably the most important photosynthesizing eukaryotes on Earth.

Data analysis based on morphological, biochemical, and molecular research has led many systematists (scientists who study relationships among organisms) to conclude that traditional classification schemes for algae, and plants in general, do not reflect natural groupings and so should be abolished. It is useful, nevertheless, to have a classification system that provides a structure for comparing and discussing the various groups in terms that phycologists (scientists who study algae) and other scientists who work with algae (such as ecologists and biochemists) and students can understand. The accompanying table compares different groups of algae at the taxonomic level of division using a scheme that is generally accepted by many phycologists.

Of the eight divisions of algae in the table, only the group called the Chlorophyta is considered to be closely related to green plants. The organisms in the other groups are considered to be more closely related to protists than to green plants.

An ancient unicellular green alga gave rise to all algae in the Chlorophyta lineage . Green algae within the Chlorophyta are further split into two groups, one that contains the charophycean algae and another that consists of all other green algae. It is generally accepted among botanists (scientists who study plants) that a charophycean alga is the closest ancestor to the higher green plants.

Without the ancestral green algae, there would be no land plants, and without the algae and land plants, life as we know it would not be possible. Algae are primary producers in any aquatic environment. They are the basis of the food web, forming the very bottom of the food chain, meaning that they provide, as a byproduct of photosynthesis, a majority of the oxygen humans and animals breathe.

Some algae form symbiotic relationships with other organisms. Specific algae, in association with various types of fungi, form lichens of many different species, one of which is a major food source for reindeer in arctic regions. Algae can also form symbiotic relationships with animals, as evidenced by the very successful association of some reef-forming corals and the dinoflagellate algae of the species Symbiodinium.

Many algae are of economic importance. The fossilized remains of diatoms , known as diatomaceous earth, are used in cleaning products and as filtering and inert processing agents. Algal polysaccharides provide agar, used to prepare media for culturing bacteria, fungi, and plant tissues and in the purification and separation of nucleic acids and proteins. In Asia, certain algae are a major source of food. A tour through an Asian food store will turn up innumerable products made with algae, including the red alga, Porphyra (also known as nori or laver), which is used as a wrapper for sushi; prepared packets of dried soups featuring green algae; and several species of red and brown algae that are packaged, dried, salted, refrigerated, pickled, or frozen. The red alga Chondrus crispus provides carrageenan, used in the food industry as a thickener and emulsifier in many brands of ice cream, pudding, baby food, and chocolate milk. Brown algae provide alginates, also used as thickeners and stabilizers in numerous industries including food, paints, and cosmetics. Algal seaweeds are also collected and used as fodder for livestock in many parts of the world.

Some algae are of concern to humans because of the problems they cause. Some algae grow on the sides of buildings and on statues or other structures, forming unsightly discoloration. Rarely, and generally only in immuno-compromised individuals, certain species of green algae invade human tissues, initially gaining entry through a cut or abrasion on the skin and then proliferating. The green alga Cephaleuros virescens can become parasitic on the leaves of economically important plants such as coffee and tea. But, by far, the most destructive algal incidents are harmful algal blooms (HABs), the consequences of which can cost millions of dollars and cause serious health problems to livestock, fish, and even humans. HABs can occur in freshwater, contaminating watering sources for livestock and killing fish, or in marine environments. The marine HAB known as red tide is caused by certain toxin -producing dinoflagellates. The toxin can poison fish and shell-fish, and shellfish contaminated by the toxin can cause mild to severe illness, even death, in humans who consume them. The alga Pfiesteria has caused toxic reactions in fish and humans in estuaries in the southeastern United States. Many HABs can be attributed to pollution, especially runoff into waterways that causes a nutrient-rich environment conducive to the rapid growth of algae.

Divisions of Algae

The type of chlorophyll and other pigments is characteristic of certain groups of algae. For instance, the Chlorophyta (and the pigmented members of the euglenoids) have both chlorophylls a and b. These pigments are contained in chloroplasts that are the result of endosymbiotic events; that is, during the evolutionary history of the algae, photosynthetic, prokaryotic organisms survived being ingested by their algal hosts and became an integral part of them. The main features distinguishing the algal divisions are listed in the accompanying table. Here are a few more details:

Glaucophyta.

The glaucophytes are unusual unicells in which the plastids are recent endosymbionts.

Cryptophyta.

The cryptomonads are unicells with phycobiliprotein pigments like the red algae, but the pigments are located in a different position within the chloroplast.

Haptophyta.

The haptophytes are distinguished by the haptonema, an anterior filament that sometimes serves to attach the unicells to a substrate or to catch prey. The haptophytes include the coccolithophorids, the scales of which formed the white cliffs of Dover on the coast of England.

Dinophyta (or Pyrrhophyta).

The dinoflagellates provide a good example of the problems in classifying algae, as many species do not have chloroplasts and, thus, live heterotrophically. As discussed above, some species are notorious for causing HABs, including red tides.

Euglenophyta.

The euglenoids are motile unicells often found in organically enriched waters; like the dinoflagellates, some species of euglenoids are colorless heterotrophs.

Heterokontophyta (or Ochrophyta).

This large division includes the brown algae (class Phaeophyceae) and the diatoms (Bacillariophyceae). Brown algae are mostly seaweeds, very diverse in form and habitat. They range in size from microscopic filaments to kelps 50 or 60 meters in length. Sargassum floats freely in the Sargasso Sea, but some kelp, such as Laminaria, have a holdfast that attaches to a substrate, leaving the stem and leafy blade to undulate in the current.

Diatoms are noted for their siliceous walls, which can form many intricate and beautiful shapes. Diatoms are very abundant in both freshwater and marine environments and are important primary producers.

Rhodophyta.

The red algae are mostly seaweeds, and they form some of the most beautiful, exotic shapes of all algae. Some species are calcified and resemble corals.

Chlorophyta.

The very diverse green algae form two major lineages. The charophycean algae have complex morphologies and ultrastructural and genetic features that indicate they are ancestral to land plants. The other lineage comprises all other green algae, which range from unicells to large multinucleate filaments.

see also Aquatic Ecosystems; Cyanobacteria; Endosymbiosis; Evolution of Plants.

Russell L. Chapman

Debra A. Waters

Bibliography

Bold, Harold C., and Michael J. Wynne. Introduction to the Algae, 2nd ed. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1985.

Graham, Linda E., and Lee W. Wilcox. Algae. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 2000.

Lembi, Carole A., and J. Robert Waaland, eds. Algae and Human Affairs. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988.

Sze, Philip. A Biology of the Algae, 3rd ed. Boston: WCB McGraw-Hill, 1998.

van den Hoek, C., D. G. Mann, and H. M. Jahns. Algae: An Introduction to Phycology.

Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995.

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

Chapman, Russell L.; Debra A. Waters. "Algae." Plant Sciences. The Gale Group Inc. 2001. Encyclopedia.com. 26 Nov. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

Chapman, Russell L.; Debra A. Waters. "Algae." Plant Sciences. The Gale Group Inc. 2001. Encyclopedia.com. (November 26, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3408000018.html

Chapman, Russell L.; Debra A. Waters. "Algae." Plant Sciences. The Gale Group Inc. 2001. Retrieved November 26, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3408000018.html

Learn more about citation styles

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)

Narcissism and Spirituality in Flannery O'Connor's Stories
Magazine article from: American Journal of Psychotherapy; 1/1/2003; ; 700+ words ; ...Connor could serve as a poignant case study of narcissism. While narcissism in the guises of ambition and hubris is an ancient...exemplify a syndrome of covert and hypervigilant narcissism that has been well characterized in the literature...
Narcissism: A New Theory
Magazine article from: Canadian Journal of Psychoanalysis; 5/1/1996; ; 700+ words ; Narcissism: A New Theory, by Neville Symington...have been more effective in tackling narcissism since I have begun thinking along the...Clearly, Symington's rethinking of narcissism is guided by practical concerns. A...
Narcissism in patients admitted to psychiatric acute wards: its relation to violence, suicidality and other psychopathology.(Research article)
Magazine article from: BMC Psychiatry; 2/27/2008; ; 700+ words ; ...Alv A Dahl [5,6] Background Narcissism describes the personality trait of an...Inventory(NPI) was developed to measure narcissism in the general population [2], and...Entitlement (5 items). Although narcissism has been a major focus for psychoanalysis...
Subject to Delusions: Narcissism, Modernism, Gender
Magazine article from: German Quarterly; 10/1/2007; ; 700+ words ; ...Caroline. Subject to Delusions: Narcissism, Modernism, Gender. Evanston...fantasy. The "paradox" of female narcissism is thus illuminating, as Caroline...argues in her appealing study of narcissism and the avant-garde, because...
New lens needed on narcissism.(LETTERS)(Letter to the editor)
Magazine article from: Clinical Psychiatry News; 5/1/2009; 700+ words ; ...Paul J. Fink's recent article on narcissism (Fink! Still at Large, March 2009...problems with self-regard to primary narcissism and overidealization obscures as much...and what results in what looks like narcissism. Having a perfect or useful self is...
Study links aggressive behavior, social rejection, narcissism
News Wire article from: University Wire; 2/26/2003; ; 700+ words ; ...who don't have such inflated egos. Narcissism is the excessive love or admiration...found was that there is a link between narcissism, social rejection and aggression...narcissists do, Twenge said. People high in narcissism who are socially rejected are much more...
"You your best thing, Sethe": trauma's narcissism.(Critical essay)
Magazine article from: Studies in the Novel; 3/22/2008; ; 700+ words ; ...coloniality.(3) As Freud noted in "On Narcissism," a person "who is tormented by organic...Whitford's words from a recent essay on narcissism, this "active turning away from the...particular and trauma in general share with narcissism. In these cases, in narcissism and...
Falling for narcissism; Drew Pinsky and S. Mark Young,.(CULTURE)(Q&A)(Column)
Newspaper article from: The Washington Times; 5/5/2009; 700+ words ; ...found to have higher-than-normal narcissism, so their self-indulgent, arrogant...authored The Mirror Effect: How Celebrity Narcissism is Seducing America. From Dr. Pinsky...some degree. What is 'dangerous' narcissism? A: Narcissism, in and of itself...
Stuck on ... them: Narcissism has seven deadly traits, which these stars happen to embody. A study guide.
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 10/1/2006; ; 700+ words ; ...administered to 200 celebrities. It divided narcissism into seven components: superiority, exhibitionism...profile examples of the seven traits of narcissism. Consider it a study guide. NARCISSISM TRAIT NO. 1: SUPERIORITY CELEBRITY SUFFERER...
Narcissism, abjection and the reader(e) of Simone de Beauvoir's Les Belles Images.(Critical essay)
Magazine article from: Studies in Twentieth and Twenty-First Century Literature; 1/1/2008; ; 700+ words ; ...in studying a specular dynamic of narcissism and abjection within the novel, we...made to witness the undoing of our own narcissism. Along the way, we acquire new understanding...forward, beyond the crippling confines of narcissism and abjection...

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

Narcissism
Encyclopedia entry from: International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences Narcissism Narcissism refers to a personality trait that includes grandiosity, vanity...adjectives as arrogant, self-centered, cocky, or conceited. The term narcissism is derived from the ancient Greek myth of Narcissus. According to...
Narcissism, Primary
Dictionary entry from: International Dictionary of Psychoanalysis NARCISSISM, PRIMARY Primary narcissism corresponds to the original libidinal cathexis of the ego...worth noting that Freud often spoke as often of "original narcissism" as of "primary narcissism" — the sense is the...
"On Narcissism: An Introduction"
Dictionary entry from: International Dictionary of Psychoanalysis "ON NARCISSISM: AN INTRODUCTION" In a letter written...begun "the sketch of an article on narcissism" (Freud and Abraham, 1965a [1907...a frequent placement of the libido (narcissism)" had already been circulating for...
Narcissism of Minor Differences
Dictionary entry from: International Dictionary of Psychoanalysis NARCISSISM OF MINOR DIFFERENCES In his article...this idea and to derive from this 'narcissism of minor differences' the hostility...expression of self-love — of narcissism. This self-love works for the preservation...
Narcissism, Secondary
Dictionary entry from: International Dictionary of Psychoanalysis NARCISSISM, SECONDARY Secondary narcissism corresponds to the return to the ego of the libido, withdrawn...external world and delusions of grandeur. Another approach to narcissism was indicated in the last section of "On Narcissism: An...

Find thousands of answers for hundreds of subjects at Smart QandA .

All answers verified by trusted sources at Encyclopedia.com

Try Smart QandA now!

For students and teachers!

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including:

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including: