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  2. Charophyceae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charophyceae

    Charophyceae is a class of charophyte green algae. AlgaeBase places it in division Charophyta. [1] Extant (living) species are placed in a single order Charales, [2] commonly known as "stoneworts" and "brittleworts".

  3. Charales - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charales

    Charales is an order of freshwater green algae in the division Charophyta, class Charophyceae, commonly known as stoneworts. Depending on the treatment of the genus Nitellopsis , living (extant) species are placed into either one family ( Characeae ) or two (Characeae and Feistiellaceae ).

  4. Chara (alga) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chara_(alga)

    The plant body is a gametophyte.It consists of the main axis (differentiated into nodes and internodes), dimorphic branches (long branch of unlimited growth and short branches of limited growth), rhizoids (multicellular with oblique septa) and stipulodes (needle-shaped structures at the base of secondary laterals).

  5. Characeae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Characeae

    Characeae is a family of freshwater green algae in the order Charales, commonly known as stoneworts. They are also known as brittleworts or skunkweed , from the fragility of their lime-encrusted stems, and from the foul odor these produce when stepped on.

  6. Charophyta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charophyta

    The Zygnematophyceae, formerly known as the Conjugatophyceae, generally possess two fairly elaborate chloroplasts in each cell, rather than many discoid ones. They reproduce asexually by the development of a septum between the two cell-halves or semi-cells (in unicellular forms, each daughter-cell develops the other semi-cell afresh) and sexually by conjugation, or the fusion of the entire ...

  7. Chara vulgaris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chara_vulgaris

    C. vulgaris in its natural habitat.. Chara vulgaris, the common stonewort, [1] is a green alga species in the genus Chara.Chara vulgaris has spikes between its bark cells in contrast to the similar Chara contraria.

  8. Are cicadas locusts? What's the difference and will they be ...

    www.aol.com/cicadas-locusts-whats-difference...

    However, you might still spot either brood this spring as "some stragglers may pop up in the southwest of the state," according to Ohio State University's Buckeye Environmental Horticulture Team.

  9. Green algae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_algae

    Flagella are only present in the motile male gametes of charophytes [15] bryophytes, pteridophytes, cycads and Ginkgo, but are absent from the gametes of Pinophyta and flowering plants. Members of the class Chlorophyceae undergo closed mitosis in the most common form of cell division among the green algae, which occurs via a phycoplast. [16]