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  2. Golden algae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_algae

    The Chrysophyceae, usually called chrysophytes, chrysomonads, golden-brown algae or golden algae, are a large group of algae, found mostly in freshwater. [3] Golden algae is also commonly used to refer to a single species, Prymnesium parvum , which causes fish kills .

  3. Chrysophyta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chrysophyta

    Chrysophyta or golden algae is a term used to refer to certain heterokonts. Dinobryon sp. from Shishitsuka Pond, Tsuchiura, Ibaraki Prefecture, Japan. It can be used to refer to: Chrysophyceae (golden algae), Bacillariophyceae (diatoms), and Xanthophyceae (yellow-green algae) together. [1] E.g., Pascher (1914). [2]

  4. Diatom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diatom

    Diatoms belong to a large group of protists, many of which contain plastids rich in chlorophylls a and c. The group has been variously referred to as heterokonts, chrysophytes, chromists or stramenopiles. Many are autotrophs such as golden algae and kelp; and heterotrophs such as water moulds, opalinids, and actinophryid heliozoa. The ...

  5. Taxonomy of diatoms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taxonomy_of_diatoms

    For many years the diatoms—treated either as a class (Bacillariophyceae) or a phylum (Bacillariophyta)—were divided into just 2 orders, corresponding to the centric and the pennate diatoms (Centrales and Pennales; alternative names Biddulphiales and Bacillariales, as used e.g. in Lee, 1989). [9]

  6. Stramenopile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stramenopile

    The stramenopiles, also called heterokonts, are a clade of organisms distinguished by the presence of stiff tripartite external hairs. In most species, the hairs are attached to flagella, in some they are attached to other areas of the cellular surface, and in some they have been secondarily lost (in which case relatedness to stramenopile ancestors is evident from other shared cytological ...

  7. Red algae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_algae

    Chloroplasts probably evolved following an endosymbiotic event between an ancestral, photosynthetic cyanobacterium and an early eukaryotic phagotroph. [17] This event (termed primary endosymbiosis) is at the origin of the red and green algae (including the land plants or Embryophytes which emerged within them) and the glaucophytes, which together make up the oldest evolutionary lineages of ...

  8. Marine botany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_botany

    Marine botany is the study of flowering vascular plant species and marine algae that live in shallow seawater of the open ocean and the littoral zone, along shorelines of the intertidal zone, coastal wetlands, and low-salinity brackish water of estuaries.

  9. Brown algae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brown_algae

    Brown algae exist in a wide range of sizes and forms. The smallest members of the group grow as tiny, feathery tufts of threadlike cells no more than a few centimeters (a few inches) long. [6]