When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Seagrass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seagrass

    Seagrass cell walls contain the same polysaccharides found in angiosperm land plants, such as cellulose [103] However, the cell walls of some seagrasses are characterised by sulfated polysaccharides, [104] [105] which is a common attribute of macroalgae from the groups of red, brown and also green algae.

  3. Palmaria palmata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palmaria_palmata

    Palmaria palmata, also called dulse, dillisk or dilsk (from Irish/Scottish Gaelic duileasc / duileasg), red dulse, sea lettuce flakes, or creathnach, is a red alga previously referred to as Rhodymenia palmata. It grows on the northern coasts of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. It is a well-known snack food.

  4. Marine botany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_botany

    About 0.085% of the 300,000 Angiosperms believed to exist can be found in marine like environments. [1] Some examples of what plants in this kingdom exist are mosses, ferns, seagrasses, mangroves, and salt marsh plants—the last three being the three major communities of angiosperms in marine waters.

  5. Asparagopsis taxiformis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asparagopsis_taxiformis

    Asparagopsis taxiformis (red sea plume or limu kohu), formerly A. sanfordiana, [1] is a species of red algae, with cosmopolitan distribution in tropical to warm temperate waters. [2] Researchers have demonstrated that feeding ruminants a diet containing 0.2% A. taxiformis seaweed reduced their methane emissions by nearly 99 percent.

  6. Cymodoceaceae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cymodoceaceae

    Cymodoceaceae is a family of flowering plants, sometimes known as the "manatee-grass family", which includes only marine species. [2]The 2016 APG IV does recognize Cymodoceaceae and places it in the order Alismatales, in the clade monocots.

  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. Reddish sea creature — with over 70 feet — found by a ...

    www.aol.com/reddish-sea-creature-over-70...

    The brown-ringed sea cucumber was found on a sea slope at a depth of about 4,400 feet, the study said. So far, the brown-ringed sea cucumber is known from one specimen found in the South China Sea ...

  9. Seaweed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seaweed

    Seaweed occupies various ecological niches. At the surface, they are only wetted by the tops of sea spray, while some species may attach to a substrate several meters deep. In some areas, littoral seaweed colonies can extend miles out to sea. [citation needed] The deepest living seaweed are some species of red algae.