Skip to content
BSI SIR
  • Home
  • Courses
    • pre-class
    • NCERT LINE BY LINE
    • Poll
    • Stories
  • About Sidd Sir
    • NEET PLAY
  • My account
    • My Courses
Search
BSI SIR
Search
  • Home
  • Courses
    • pre-class
    • NCERT LINE BY LINE
    • Poll
    • Stories
  • About Sidd Sir
    • NEET PLAY
  • My account
    • My Courses
NCERT-NEET-Algae are chlorophyll-bearing, simple, thalloid, autotrophic and largelyaquatic (both fresh water and marine) organisms. They occur in avariety of other habitats: moist stones, soils and wood. Some of them also occur in association with fungi (lichen) and animals (e.g., on slothbear).

NCERT-NEET-Algae are chlorophyll-bearing, simple, thalloid, autotrophic and largelyaquatic (both fresh water and marine) organisms. They occur in avariety of other habitats: moist stones, soils and wood. Some of them also occur in association with fungi (lichen) and animals (e.g., on slothbear).

/ NCERT LINE BY LINE, Plant Kingdom, pre-class / By Prof. Siddharth Sanghvi

Enter OTP to View Content

Algae and their Main Characteristics

Category Description Examples
Habitat Chlorophyll-bearing, simple, thalloid, autotrophic, and largely aquatic (both freshwater and marine) organisms. They occur in a variety of other habitats: moist stones, soils, and wood. Some of them also occur in association with fungi (lichen) and animals (e.g., on sloth bear). Lichen, Marine algae (on sloth bear)
Form and Size Highly variable, ranging from colonial forms like Volvox and filamentous forms like Ulothrix and Spirogyra. A few marine forms, such as kelps, form massive plant bodies. Volvox (colonial), Ulothrix (filamentous), Spirogyra (filamentous), Kelps (massive)
Reproduction Vegetative: By fragmentation. Each fragment develops into a thallus.
Asexual: By production of different types of spores, the most common being zoospores. They are flagellated (motile) and on germination give rise to new plants.
Sexual: By fusion of two gametes:
  • Isogamous: Gametes can be flagellated and similar in size (Ulothrix) or non-flagellated and similar in size (Spirogyra).
  • Anisogamous: Fusion of two gametes dissimilar in size (Eudorina).
  • Oogamous: Fusion between a large, non-motile female gamete and a smaller, motile male gamete (Volvox, Fucus).
Fragmentation, Zoospores, Ulothrix (isogamous), Spirogyra (isogamous), Eudorina (anisogamous), Volvox (oogamous), Fucus (oogamous)
Importance Algae are useful to man in a variety of ways. At least a half of the total carbon dioxide fixation on earth is carried out by algae through photosynthesis. Being photosynthetic they increase the level of dissolved oxygen in their immediate environment. They are of paramount importance as primary producers of energy-rich compounds which form the basis of the food cycles of all aquatic animals. Many species of Porphyra, Laminaria and Sargassum are among the 70 species of marine algae used as food. Certain marine brown and red algae produce large amounts of hydrocolloids (water holding substances), e.g., algin (brown algae) and carrageen (red algae) which are used commercially. Agar, one of the commercial products obtained from Gelidium and Gracilaria are used to grow microbes and in preparations of ice-creams and jellies. Chlorella, a unicellular alga rich in proteins, is used as food supplement even by space travellers. Porphyra (food), Laminaria (food), Sargassum (food), Gelidium (agar), Gracilaria (agar), Chlorella (food supplement)
Classes Divided into three main classes: Chlorophyceae, Phaeophyceae, and Rhodophyceae. Chlorophyceae, Phaeophyceae, Rhodophyceae
Classes Common Name Major Pigments Stored Food Cell Wall Flagellar Number and Position of Insertions Habitat
Chlorophyceae Green algae Chlorophyll a, b Starch, proteins, oil droplets Inner layer of cellulose and outer layer of pectose 2-8, equal, apical Fresh water, brackish water, salt water
Additional Details: Unicellular, colonial, or filamentous; chloroplasts may be discoid, plate-like, reticulate, cup-shaped, spiral, or ribbon-shaped; pyrenoids present; vegetative reproduction by fragmentation or spores; asexual reproduction by flagellated zoospores; sexual reproduction isogamous, anisogamous, or oogamous. Common species: Chlamydomonas, Volvox, Ulothrix, Spirogyra, Chara.
Phaeophyceae Brown algae Chlorophyll a, c, fucoxanthin Mannitol, laminarin Cellulose and algin 2, unequal, lateral Fresh water (rare), brackish water, salt water
Additional Details: Marine habitats; great variation in size and form; plant body attached to the substratum by a holdfast, stipe, and frond; vegetative reproduction by fragmentation; asexual reproduction by biflagellate zoospores; sexual reproduction isogamous, anisogamous, or oogamous. Common species: Ectocarpus, Dictyota, Laminaria, Sargassum, Fucus.
Rhodophyceae Red algae Chlorophyll a, d, phycoerythrin Floridean starch Cellulose, pectin, and poly sulphate esters Absent Fresh water (some), brackish water, salt water (most)
Additional Details: Predominantly marine; red thalli are multicellular with complex body organization; vegetative reproduction by fragmentation; asexual reproduction by non-motile spores; sexual reproduction is oogamous with complex post-fertilization developments. Common species: Polysiphonia, Porphyra, Gracilaria, Gelidium.
Type of Chloroplast Description Example Organism
Discoid Coin-shaped Chara
Plate-like Flat and elongated Fritschiella
Girdle-shaped Band-like, wrapped around the nucleus Ulothrix
Ribbon-shaped Long and thin, spiral-shaped in some species Spirogyra
Stellate Star-shaped with radiating lobes Zygnema
Reticulate Net-like, with interconnected strands Oedogonium
← Previous Post
Next Post →

NEETPLAY.COM

Everything is FREE for Students

  • Home
  • Courses
  • About Sidd Sir
  • My account

Copyright © 2025 BSI SIR | Powered by BSI SIR