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A Handbook of Biology

Examples of Algae

BËÑËFÏTS ØF ÅLGÅË

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Through photosynthesis, they fix nearly half of the total CO2 on earth and

increase the level of dissolved oxygen.

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Many marine algae (70 species) are used as food. E.g. Porphyra,

Laminaria and Sargassum.

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Some marine brown & red algae produce hydrocolloids (water holding

substances). E.g. Algin (brown algae) and carrageen (red algae). These

are used commercially.

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They are primary producers and the basis of the food cycles of all

aquatic animals.

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Agar (from Gelidium & Gracilaria) is used to grow microbes and in ice-

creams and jellies.

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Chlorella and Spirulina are unicellular algae, rich in proteins and are

used as food supplements even by space travellers.

Algae include 3 classes: Chlorophyceae, Phaeophyceae and Rhodophyceae.

ÇHLØRØPHÝÇËÅË (GRËËÑ ÅLGÅË)

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They are usually grass green due to the pigments chlorophyll a and

b in chloroplasts.

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The chloroplasts may be discoid, plate like, reticulate, cup shaped,

spiral or ribbon shaped in different species.

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Most of them have one or more pyrenoids (storage bodies) located

in the chloroplasts Pyrenoids contain protein besides starch.

(AIPMT 2012)

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Some algae store food in the form of oil droplets.

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Have a rigid cell wall made of an inner layer of cellulose and outer

layer of pectose.

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Some commonly from green algae are Chlamydomonas, Volvox,

Ulothrix, Spirogyra and Chara.