Oedogonium

Oedogonium
Oedogonium sp., showing an oogonium (swollen cell) and antheridia (short stacked cells)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Viridiplantae
Division: Chlorophyta
Class: Chlorophyceae
Order: Oedogoniales
Genus: Oedogonium
(Hirn, 1900) Link[1]

Oedogonium is a genus of filamentous green algae, with unbranched[1] filaments that are one cell thick. Oedogonium can be free-floating, though it is usually attached to aquatic plants by a holdfast.[1] It appears greenish and inhabits calm, fresh water.

Asexual reproduction

Oedogonium can reproduce asexually by fragmentation of the filaments, through some other types of non-motile spores,[1] and also through zoospores, which have many flagella. These develop in a zoosporangium cell, one zoospore per zoosporangium.[1] After settling and losing its flagella, a zoospore grows into a filament.[2]

Sexual reproduction

The life cycle of Oedogonium is haplontic, i.e., meiosis is zygotic. Antheridia which produce sperm, and oogonia which produce an egg, release the sperm and egg. The egg and sperm then fuse and form a zygote which is diploid (2n). The zygote then produces the filamentous green alga which is haploid (1n).

Species

Species of Oedogonium are divided into two major groups on the basis of the distribution of the sex organs:

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Guiry, M.D.; Guiry, G.M. (2008). "Oedogonium". AlgaeBase. World-wide electronic publication, National University of Ireland, Galway.
  2. John Kinross. "The Genus Oedogonium".
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