Rhodophyta
Rhodophyta
The red algae phylum Rhodophyta synthesizes a class of water-soluble pigments termed phycobilins, known to be produced only by another algae, the Cryptomonads. There are approximately 6,000 species of Rhodophyta. Some of them are unicellular species that grow as filaments or membrane-like sheet cells, and some multicellular coralline species deposit calcium carbonate inside and around their cell walls, which are very similar in appearance to pink and red corals. Some Rhodophyta have an important role in coral-reef formation in tropical seas due to the deposits of calcium carbonate crystals they release in the environment, and are therefore termed coralline algae.
Rhodophyta are ancient algae whose fossil remains are found under the form of coralline algal skeletons in limestone deposits of coral reef origin dating back to the Precambrian Era. They use the blue spectrum of visible light to accomplish photosynthesis that allows them to live in deep waters, storing energy under the form of Floridean starch. They make mostly chlorophyll-a, and the pigments alpha and beta-carotene, phycoerythrin, as well as others similar to those made by Cyanobacteria, such as allophycocyanin and r-phycocyanin. The cell walls are made mainly of cellulose (but some species use xylan), and colloidal substances, such as agars and carageenan; and the cells may be multinucleated. The Floridean starch, a carbohydrate molecule consisting of 15 units of glucose, is kept free in the cytoplasm , whereas in other algae it is attached to the chloroplast . Some species are consumed by humans such as the Japanese nori (Porphyra ) and others are utilized as components in processed food and by the pharmaceutical industries, such as Chondrus, and Gelidium.
See also Blue-green algae; Petroleum microbiology; Protists; Xanthophylls
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'Homage' revives forgotten arias of the golden age
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 10/6/2006; ; 510 words
; ...concert staple these days. Moravian-born diva Maria Jeritza helped introduce "Tosca" in 1900 and sang...s "Das Wunder der Heliane," intended for Jeritza, but originally sung by Jeritza's rival, Lotte Lehmann. Regarded as the...
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Missing Cruz is found dead; Autopsy helps ID Filipina analyst
Newspaper article from: Filipino Reporter; 2/26/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...26-2004 The elderly parents of Maria Pilar Cruz, the missing Wall Street...strong to find justice for Pipay (Maria's nickname)." Her daughter...Czechoslovakian opera diva named Maria Jeritza and is still known in the neighborhood...
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Recordings -- Vienna State Opera Live, Vols. 13-16
Magazine article from: Opera News; 3/2/1996; ; 700+ words
; ...2 (2) VOL 14. WAGNER (1933). Huni-Mihacsek, Jeritza, Runge, Ursuleac; Lorenz, Mayr, Schorr, Volker...or so of Mayr's Hunding. There is rather more of Maria Jeritza's Brunnhilde on a bad night: she sounds hoarse...
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Thumbs up for 'Turandot'
Newspaper article from: Beacon News, The (Aurora, IL); 10/5/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...voice on the planet, perfect for the role of Turandot. Maria Jeritza, a gorgeous Diva who sang the role at the Met in 1926...out the role. Puccini was quite a womanizer and while Jeritza succumbed and shared his bed, Raisa had an attentive...
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`Salute to Symphony' reaches out next week
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 3/11/1994; ; 700+ words
; ...program ("Nacht und Traeume," "Gretchen am Spinnrade," "Ave Maria," "Der Hirt auf dem Felsen"); she must compete with memories...prominent singers of the past -- such Vienna favorites as the Maria Jeritza, Lotte Lehmann, Maria C
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Kathleen Battle...and when she was good...
Newspaper article from: Tri-State Defender; 6/25/1997; 700+ words
; ...fodder for the press and the public. Foremost in mind Maria Callas, Giudetta Pasta, Nellie Melba, Tiana Lemnitz...Monserrat Caballe (another no show for engagements), Maria Jeritza, Rosa Ponselle, and others. Sometimes, divas were...
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The face of modern opera
Newspaper article from: Evening Standard - London; 1/14/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...and was seen soon after at the Met with the effulgent Maria Jeritza as heroine. The composer was Erich Wolfgang Korngold...hero, Paul, cannot get over the death of his wife, Maria a common condition after 4,000 Viennese, mostly young...
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Tosca - out with a bang
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 8/6/1995; ; 700+ words
; ...at the Met in New York, the knife with which Tosca (Maria Jeritza) murders the evil Baron Scarpia (Antonio Scotti) at...During the famous Covent Garden production of 1965, Maria Callas's hair caught fire while she was singing the...
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"Infinite riches in a little room": the music collections in the Pierpont Morgan Library.
Magazine article from: Notes; 3/1/1999; 700+ words
; ...part of Buondelmonte, Donizetti's rifacimento of Maria Stuarda; a copyist's manuscript of part of the vocal...corrections by Korngold throughout, that once belonged to Maria Jeritza, who sang the role of Marietta at the first performance...
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Opera choice: Nabucco/ Tosca
Newspaper article from: Scotland on Sunday; 1/20/2002; ; 663 words
; ...quintessential dramatic soprano role. Outstanding Toscas have included Geraldine Farrar, Maria Jeritza (who sang Vissi d'arte lying down), Leontyne Price and Maria Callas, whose performances with Titto Gobbi's Scarpia are the stuff of legend...
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Maria Jeritza
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Maria Jeritza , 1887-1982, Austrian-American soprano. b. Brünn (now...She created the title role in the opera Ariadne by Richard Strauss. Jeritza sang (1921-32) at the Metropolitan Opera, New York City, where her...
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Jeritza, Maria
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Music
Jeritza, Maria [ Jedlitzka, Mizzi ] ( b Brno, 1887; d Orange, NJ, 1982). Moravian-born Amer. soprano (Amer. cit. 1943). Opera d...
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Strauss, Richard (Georg)
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Music
...attending perfs. cond. by Beecham. His last work, completed 23 Nov. 1948, was a song Malven ( Knobel), ded. to Maria Jeritza . After operation in Lausanne in Dec. 1948, returned to Garmisch May 1949, dying there on 8 Sept. Strauss, like...
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