Chlorophyta
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chlorophyta |
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"Siphoneae" from Ernst Haeckel's Kunstformen der Natur, 1904
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Scientific classification | ||||||||
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Chlorophyceae |
The Chlorophyta, or green algae, include about 8000 species[1] of mostly aquatic photosynthetic eukaryotic organisms. Like the land plants (Bryophyta and Tracheophyta), green algae contain chlorophylls a and b, and store food as starch in their plastids. They are related to the Charophyta and Embryophyta (land plants), together making up the Viridiplantae.
They contain both unicellular and multicellular species. While most species live in freshwater habitats and a large number in marine habitats, other species are adapted to a wide range of environments. Watermelon snow, or Chlamydomonas nivalis, of the class Chlorophyceae, lives on summer alpine snowfields. Others live attached to rocks or woody parts of trees. Some lichens are symbiotic relationships with fungi and a green alga. Members of the Chlorophyta also form symbiotic relationships with protozoa, sponges and coelenterates.
[edit] Classes
- Class Bryopsidophyceae Bessey
- Class Chlorophyceae Wille
- Class Pedinophyceae Moestrup
- Class Pleurastrophyceae Mattox & K. D. Stewart
- Class Prasinophyceae T. A. Chr. ex Ø. Moestrup & J. Throndsen
- Class Trebouxiophyceae T. Friedl
- Class Ulvophyceae K. R. Mattox & K. D. Stewart
[edit] References
Lewis, L. A. & McCourt, R. M. (2004). Green algae and the origin of land plants. American Journal of Botany 91 (10): 1535-1556.