All Topics  
Red algae

 

   Email Print
   Bookmark   Link






 

Red algae



 
 
The red algae (Rhodophyta, , from Greek
Greek language

Greek is an Indo-European languages native to the southern Balkan peninsula, the language of the Greek people. It forms an independent branch within Indo-European....
: (rhodon) = rose + (phyton) = plant, thus red plant) are one of the oldest groups of eukaryotic algae, and also one of the largest, with about 5,000–6,000 species  of mostly multicellular, marine
Ocean

An ocean is a major body of Seawater, and a principal component of the hydrosphere. Approximately 71% of the Earth's surface is covered by ocean, a World Ocean that is customarily divided into several principal oceans and smaller seas....
 algae
Algae

Algae are a large and diverse group of simple, typically autotrophic organisms, ranging from unicellular to multicellular forms. The largest and most complex marine forms are called seaweeds....
, including many notable seaweed
Seaweed

Seaweed is a loose colloquial term encompassing macroscopic, multicellular, benthos ocean algae. The term includes some members of the rhodophyta, phycophyta and green algae....
s. Other references indicate 10,000 species. 

The red algae form a distinct group characterized by the following attributes: eukaryotic cells without flagella and centriole
Centriole

A centriole is a barrel-shaped organelle found in most animal eukaryotic Cell s, though absent in higher plants and most fungi. The walls of each centriole are usually composed of nine triplets of microtubules ....
s, using floridean starch as food reserve, with phycobiliprotein
Phycobiliprotein

Phycobiliproteins are water-soluble proteins present in cyanobacteria and certain algae that capture light energy which is then passed on to chlorophylls during photosynthesis....
s as accessory pigment
Accessory pigment

Accessory pigments are pigment compounds, found in photosynthetic organisms, that work in conjunction with chlorophyll a. They include other forms of this pigment, such as chlorophyll b in green algal and higher plant antennae, while other algae may contain chlorophyll c or d....
s (giving them their red color), and with chloroplast
Chloroplast

Chloroplasts are organelles found in plant cells and other eukaryote organisms that conduct photosynthesis. Chloroplasts capture light energy to conserve Thermodynamic free energy in the form of Adenosine triphosphate and reduce NADP to NADPH through a complex set of processes called photosynthesis....
s lacking external endoplasmic reticulum
Endoplasmic reticulum

The endoplasmic reticulum is a eukaryote organelle that forms an interconnected network of tubules, vesicle , and cisternae within cell . The lacey membranes of the endoplasmic reticulum were first seen by Keith R....
 and containing unstacked thylakoid
Thylakoid

A thylakoid is a membrane-bound compartment inside chloroplasts and cyanobacterium. They are the site of the light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis....
s.  Most red algae are also multicellular, macroscopic, marine, and have sexual reproduction
Sexual reproduction

Sexual reproduction is characterized by processes that pass a Genetic recombination of Genetics material to offspring, resulting in Genetic diversity....
.

Many of the coralline algae
Coralline algae

Coralline algae are red algae in the Family Corallinaceae of the order Corallinales. They are characterized by a thallus that is hard because of calcareous deposits contained within the cell walls....
, which secrete calcium carbonate
Calcium carbonate

Calcium carbonate is a chemical compound with the chemical formula CalciumCarbonOxygen3. It is a common substance found as Rock in all parts of the world, and is the main component of seashells, snails, and eggshells....
 and play a major role in building coral reef
Coral reef

Coral reefs are aragonite structures produced by living organisms. In most reefs the predominant organisms are colonial cnidarian that secrete an exoskeleton of calcium carbonate....
s, belong here.






Discussion
Ask a question about 'Red algae'
Start a new discussion about 'Red algae'
Answer questions from other users
Full Discussion Forum



Recent Posts









Encyclopedia


The red algae (Rhodophyta, , from Greek
Greek language

Greek is an Indo-European languages native to the southern Balkan peninsula, the language of the Greek people. It forms an independent branch within Indo-European....
: (rhodon) = rose + (phyton) = plant, thus red plant) are one of the oldest groups of eukaryotic algae, and also one of the largest, with about 5,000–6,000 species  of mostly multicellular, marine
Ocean

An ocean is a major body of Seawater, and a principal component of the hydrosphere. Approximately 71% of the Earth's surface is covered by ocean, a World Ocean that is customarily divided into several principal oceans and smaller seas....
 algae
Algae

Algae are a large and diverse group of simple, typically autotrophic organisms, ranging from unicellular to multicellular forms. The largest and most complex marine forms are called seaweeds....
, including many notable seaweed
Seaweed

Seaweed is a loose colloquial term encompassing macroscopic, multicellular, benthos ocean algae. The term includes some members of the rhodophyta, phycophyta and green algae....
s. Other references indicate 10,000 species. 

The red algae form a distinct group characterized by the following attributes: eukaryotic cells without flagella and centriole
Centriole

A centriole is a barrel-shaped organelle found in most animal eukaryotic Cell s, though absent in higher plants and most fungi. The walls of each centriole are usually composed of nine triplets of microtubules ....
s, using floridean starch as food reserve, with phycobiliprotein
Phycobiliprotein

Phycobiliproteins are water-soluble proteins present in cyanobacteria and certain algae that capture light energy which is then passed on to chlorophylls during photosynthesis....
s as accessory pigment
Accessory pigment

Accessory pigments are pigment compounds, found in photosynthetic organisms, that work in conjunction with chlorophyll a. They include other forms of this pigment, such as chlorophyll b in green algal and higher plant antennae, while other algae may contain chlorophyll c or d....
s (giving them their red color), and with chloroplast
Chloroplast

Chloroplasts are organelles found in plant cells and other eukaryote organisms that conduct photosynthesis. Chloroplasts capture light energy to conserve Thermodynamic free energy in the form of Adenosine triphosphate and reduce NADP to NADPH through a complex set of processes called photosynthesis....
s lacking external endoplasmic reticulum
Endoplasmic reticulum

The endoplasmic reticulum is a eukaryote organelle that forms an interconnected network of tubules, vesicle , and cisternae within cell . The lacey membranes of the endoplasmic reticulum were first seen by Keith R....
 and containing unstacked thylakoid
Thylakoid

A thylakoid is a membrane-bound compartment inside chloroplasts and cyanobacterium. They are the site of the light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis....
s.  Most red algae are also multicellular, macroscopic, marine, and have sexual reproduction
Sexual reproduction

Sexual reproduction is characterized by processes that pass a Genetic recombination of Genetics material to offspring, resulting in Genetic diversity....
.

Many of the coralline algae
Coralline algae

Coralline algae are red algae in the Family Corallinaceae of the order Corallinales. They are characterized by a thallus that is hard because of calcareous deposits contained within the cell walls....
, which secrete calcium carbonate
Calcium carbonate

Calcium carbonate is a chemical compound with the chemical formula CalciumCarbonOxygen3. It is a common substance found as Rock in all parts of the world, and is the main component of seashells, snails, and eggshells....
 and play a major role in building coral reef
Coral reef

Coral reefs are aragonite structures produced by living organisms. In most reefs the predominant organisms are colonial cnidarian that secrete an exoskeleton of calcium carbonate....
s, belong here. Red algae such as dulse
Dulse

Palmaria palmata Kuntze, also called dulse, dillisk, dilsk or creathnach, is a red alga previously referred to as Rhodymenia palmata Greville....
 (Palmaria palmata) and laver
Laver (seaweed)

Laver is an Eating seaweed that has a high mineral salt content, particularly iodine and iron. It is used for making #Laverbread, a traditional Welsh dish....
 (nori
Nori

is the Japanese name for various edible seaweed species of the red alga Porphyra including most notably P. yezoensis and P. tenera, sometimes called laver ....
/gim) are a traditional part of European
European cuisine

European cuisine, or alternatively Western cuisine is a generalized term collectively referring to the cuisines of Europe and other Western world....
 and Asian cuisine
Asian cuisine

Asian cuisine styles can be broken down into several regional styles that have roots in the peoples and cultures of those regions. The major types can be roughly defined as East Asian with its origins in Imperial era of Chinese history and now encompassing modern Japan and the Korean peninsula; Southeast Asian which encompasses th...
 and are used to make other products like agar
Agar

Agar or agar agar is a gelatinous substance derived from seaweed. Historically and in a modern context, it is chiefly used as an ingredient in desserts throughout Japan, but in the past century has found extensive use as a solid substrate to contain Growth medium for microbiology work....
, carrageenan
Carrageenan

Carrageenans or carrageenins are a family of linear sulphated polysaccharides extracted from red seaweeds. The name is derived from a type of seaweed that is abundant along the Ireland coastline....
s and other food additives. 

Red algae are autotroph
Autotroph

An autotroph is an organism that produces complex organic compounds from simple inorganic molecules using energy from light or inorganic chemical reactions....
s because they can make their own food.

Fossil record

The oldest fossil identified as a red alga is also the oldest fossil eukaryote
Eukaryote

Animals, plants, fungus, and protists are eukaryotes , organisms whose Cell are organized into complex structures enclosed within Cell membrane....
 that belongs to a specific modern taxon
Taxon

A taxon or taxonomic unit is a name designating an organism or a group of organisms. In biological nomenclature according to Carl Linnaeus, a taxon is assigned a taxonomic rank and can be placed at a particular level in a systematic hierarchy reflecting evolutionary relationships....
. Bangiomorpha pubescens, a multicellular fossil from arctic Canada
Canada

Canada is a country occupying most of northern North America, extending from the Atlantic Ocean in the east to the Pacific Ocean in the west and northward into the Arctic Ocean....
, strongly resembles the modern red alga Bangia despite occurring in rocks dating to 1200 million years ago. 

Red algae are important builders of limestone
Limestone

File:Limestone Formation In Waitomo.jpgLimestone is a sedimentary rock composed largely of the mineral calcite . The deposition of limestone strata is often a by-product and indicator of biological activity in the geology record....
 reefs. The earliest such coralline algae, the solenopores, are known from the Cambrian
Cambrian

The Cambrian is a geologic period that began about Mya at the end of the Proterozoic eon and ended about Ma with the beginning of the Ordovician period ....
 Period. Other algae of different origins filled a similar role in the late Paleozoic
Paleozoic

The Paleozoic or Palaeozoic Era is the earliest of three geology Era of the Phanerozoic Eon . The Paleozoic spanned from roughly , and is subdivided into six period ; from oldest to youngest they are: the Cambrian, Ordovician, Silurian, Devonian period, Carboniferous, and Permian...
, and in more recent reefs.

There are also calcite
Calcite

Calcite is a Carbonate minerals and the most stable Polymorphism of calcium carbonate . The other polymorphs are the minerals aragonite and vaterite....
 crusts which have been interpreted as the remains of coralline red algae dating to the terminal Proterozoic
Proterozoic

The Proterozoic is a eon representing a period before the first abundant complex life on Earth. The Proterozoic Eon extended from 2500 annum to 542.0 ? 1.0 Ma , and is the most recent part of the old, informally named ?Precambrian? time....
. Thallophyte
Thallophyte

The thallophytes are a polyphyletic group of non-mobile organisms traditionally described as "relatively simple plants" or "lower plants" with undifferentiated bodies ....
s resembling coralline red algae are known from the late Proterozoic Doushantuou formation.

Evolutionary history

The red algae are considered to be one of the three groups forming the Archaeplastida
Archaeplastida

The Archaeplastida or Primoplantae are a major line of eukaryotes, comprising the embryophytes, green alga and red algae, and a small group called the glaucophytes....
, together with the glaucophytes and the green lineage or Viridiplantae
Viridiplantae

Viridiplantae are a clade comprising the green algae and embryophyte plants.In some classification systems they have been treated as a kingdom , under various names, e.g....
. The archaeplastida originated from the primary endosymbiosis event between a eukaryote
Eukaryote

Animals, plants, fungus, and protists are eukaryotes , organisms whose Cell are organized into complex structures enclosed within Cell membrane....
 and a cyanobacterium ~1,600 million years ago creating the first chloroplast and the first photosynthetic eukaryote.

Molecular data shows that the more complex Florideophyceae
Florideophyceae

Florideophyceae was a class of red algae. It is now merged with the Bangiaceae into the Rhodophyceae.They were once thought to be the only algae to bear pit connections, but these have since been found in the filamentous stage of the Bangiacae....
, once thought to be a separate clade
Clade

A clade is a term used in modern alpha taxonomy, the scientific classification of living and fossil organisms, to describe a monophyletic group, defined as a group consisting of a single common ancestor and all its descendants.The term "monophyletic group" is used in this article in the conventional sense of "an a...
, are in fact a monophyletic group nested within the Bangiophyceae
Bangiophyceae

Bangiophyceae was a class of red algae; it has since been merged with the Floridophyceae to form the Rhodophyceae. The Bangiophyceae, as defined traditionally, are paraphyletic.....
, as a sister group to the Bangiales. This prompted the renaming of the Bangiophyceae to a more inclusive monoclass, Rhodophyceae.

Taxonomy

The red algae are classified in the Archaeplastida, along with the glaucophyte
Glaucophyte

The glaucophytes, also known as glaucocystophytes or glaucocystids, are a small group of freshwater microscopic algae. Together with the red algae and Viridiplantae they form the Archaeplastida....
s and Viridiplantae
Viridiplantae

Viridiplantae are a clade comprising the green algae and embryophyte plants.In some classification systems they have been treated as a kingdom , under various names, e.g....
 (green algae and land plants).

Below are two valid published taxonomies of the red algae, although neither necessarily has to be used, as the taxonomy of the algae is still in a state of flux (with classification above the level of order
Order (biology)

In Biological classification used in biology, the order is a taxonomic rank between class and family . The superorder is a rank between class and order....
 having received little scientific attention for most of the 20th century). If one defines the kingdom Plantae to mean the Archaeplastida, the red algae will be part of that kingdom; but if Plantae are defined more narrowly, to be the Viridiplantae, then the red algae might be considered their own kingdom or part of the kingdom Protista. The two classification systems below place the red algae in the plant kingdom.

According to synthesis in Lee (2008)Classification system according to
Hwan Su Yoon et al. 2006
Classification system according to
Saunders and Hommersand 2004
Domain Eukaryota (Corticata)
  • Kingdom Chromalveolata Cavalier-Smith, 1998
    • Phylum Rhodophyta
      • Class Rhodophytina
        • Orders
          • Cyanidiales
          • Porphyridiales
          • Bangiales
          • Acrochaetiales
          • Batrachospermales
          • Nemaliales
          • Corallinales
          • Gelidiales
          • Gracilariales
          • Ceramiales
Kingdom Plant
Plant

Plants are Life organisms belonging to the Kingdom Plantae. They include familiar organisms such as trees, herbs, bushes, grasses, vines, ferns, mosses, and green algae....
ae Haeckel
  • Subkingdom Biliphyta Wettstein
    • Phylum Rhodophyta Wettstein
      • Subphylum Cyanidiophytina subphylum novus
        • Class Cyanidiophyceae Merola et al
      • Subphylum Rhodophytina subphylum novus
        • Class Bangiophyceae
          Bangiophyceae

          Bangiophyceae was a class of red algae; it has since been merged with the Floridophyceae to form the Rhodophyceae. The Bangiophyceae, as defined traditionally, are paraphyletic.....
           Wettstein
        • Class Compsopogonophyceae Saunders et Hommersand
        • Class Florideophyceae
          Florideophyceae

          Florideophyceae was a class of red algae. It is now merged with the Bangiaceae into the Rhodophyceae.They were once thought to be the only algae to bear pit connections, but these have since been found in the filamentous stage of the Bangiacae....
           Cronquist
        • Class Porphyridiophyceae classis nova
        • Class Rhodellophyceae Cavalier-Smith
        • Class Stylonematophyceae classis nova
Kingdom Plant
Plant

Plants are Life organisms belonging to the Kingdom Plantae. They include familiar organisms such as trees, herbs, bushes, grasses, vines, ferns, mosses, and green algae....
ae Haeckel
  • Subkingdom Rhodoplantae
    • Phylum Cyanidiophyta
      • Class Cyanidiophyceae Merola et al
    • Phylum Rhodophyta Wettstein
      • Subphylum Rhodellophytina
        • Class Rhodellophyceae Cavalier-Smith
      • Subphylum Metarhodophytina
        • Class Compsopogonophyceae Saunders et Hommersand
      • Subphylum Eurhodophytina
        • Class Bangiophyceae
          Bangiophyceae

          Bangiophyceae was a class of red algae; it has since been merged with the Floridophyceae to form the Rhodophyceae. The Bangiophyceae, as defined traditionally, are paraphyletic.....
           Wettstein
        • Class Florideophyceae
          Florideophyceae

          Florideophyceae was a class of red algae. It is now merged with the Bangiaceae into the Rhodophyceae.They were once thought to be the only algae to bear pit connections, but these have since been found in the filamentous stage of the Bangiacae....
           Cronquist
          • Subclass Hildenbrandiophycidae
          • Subclass Nemaliophycidae
          • Subclass Ahnfeltiophycidae
          • Subclass Rhodymeniophycidae


Species of red algae

There are around 6,500 to 10,000 known species,  nearly all of which are marine, with about 200 that only live in fresh water
Fresh Water

Fresh Water is the debut album by Australian rock and blues singer Alison McCallum, released in 1972. Rare for an Australian artist at the time, it came in a gatefold sleeve....
. However, estimates of the number of real species vary by 100%. 

Some examples of species and genera of red algae are:
  • Atractophora hypnoides
  • Gelidiella calcicola
    Gelidiella calcicola

    Gelidiella calcicola Maggs and Guiry is a rare algal species in the Rhodophyta, described for the first time in 1987. It has been found at only 20 sites in the British Isles....
  • Lemanea
    Lemanea

    Lemanea is the generic name for an alga of which occurs in the British Isles.There are two species in the British Isles:-* Lemanea fluviatilis C.Ag....
    , a freshwater genus
  • Palmaria palmata, dulse
  • Plocamium cartilagineum, Red Seaweed
  • Plocamium coccineum, Red Seaweed
  • Schmitzia hiscockiana
    Schmitzia hiscockiana

    Schmitzia hiscockiana Maggs & Guiry is a small, rare, red seaweed or marine alga of the Rhodophyta or red algae. It was discovered and named in 1985....
  • Chondrus crispus, Irish moss
  • Mastocarpus stellatus
    Mastocarpus stellatus

    Mastocarpus stellatus, also called Cl?imh?n Cait , carragheen, or false Irish moss, is a species of red algae closely related to Irish Moss, or Chondrus crispus....


Chemistry


The values of red algae reflect their lifestyles. The largest difference results from their photosynthetic metabolic pathway
Metabolic pathway

In biochemistry, a metabolic pathway is a series of chemistry reactions occurring within a cell . In each pathway, a principal chemical is modified by chemical reactions....
: algae which use as a carbon source have far more negative values than those which only use
Carbon dioxide

Carbon dioxide is a chemical compound composed of two oxygen atoms covalent bond to a single carbon atom. It is a gas at standard temperature and pressure and exists in Earth's atmosphere in this state....
. An additional difference of about 1.71‰ separates groups which are intertidal from those below the lowest tide line, which are never exposed to atmospheric carbon. The latter group use the more negative which is dissolved in sea water, whereas those with access to atmospheric carbon reflect the more positive signature of this reserve.

Morphology


Red algae have a double cell wall
Cell wall

A cell wall is a tough, flexible and sometimes fairly rigid layer that surrounds some types of cell . It is located outside the cell membrane and provides these cells with structural support and protection, and also acts as a filtering mechanism....
. The outer layer are usually composed of "pectic
Pectic acid

Pectic acid, also known as polygalacturonic acid is a water insoluble, Transparency gelatinous acid existing in ripe fruit and some vegetables....
 substances", from which agar
Agar

Agar or agar agar is a gelatinous substance derived from seaweed. Historically and in a modern context, it is chiefly used as an ingredient in desserts throughout Japan, but in the past century has found extensive use as a solid substrate to contain Growth medium for microbiology work....
 can be manufactured. The internal wall is mostly cellulose.

Pit connections and pit plugs


Pit connections

Pit connection
Pit connection

Holes are found in the septae of some groups of fungi and red algae. In the fungi, they are known as septal pores; in the algae, pit connections....
s and pit plugs are unique and distinctive features of red algae that form during the process of cytokinesis
Cytokinesis

Cytokinesis is the process where the cytoplasm of a single eukaryotic cell is divided to form two daughter cells. It usually initiates during the late stages of mitosis, and sometimes meiosis, splitting a binucleate cell in two, to ensure that chromosome number is maintained from one generation to the next....
 following mitosis
Mitosis

Mitosis is the process in which a eukaryotic cell separates the chromosomes in its cell nucleus, into two identical sets in two daughter nuclei....
. In red algae, cytokinesis is incomplete. Typically, a small pore is left in the middle of the newly formed partition. The pit connection is formed where the daughter cells remain in contact.

Shortly after the pit connection is formed cytoplasmic continuity is blocked by the generation of a pit plug, which is deposited in the wall gap that connects the cells.

Connections between cells having a common parent cell are called primary pit connections. Because apical growth is the norm in red algae, most cells have two primary pit connections, one to each adjacent cell.

Connections that exist between cells not sharing a common parent cells are labeled secondary pit connections. These connections are formed when an unequal cell division produced a nucleated daughter cell that then fuses to an adjacent cell. Patterns of secondary pit connections can be seen in the order Ceramiales.

Pit plugs

After a pit connection is formed, tubular membranes appear. A granular protein, called the plug core, then forms around the membranes. The tubular membranes eventually disappear. While some orders of red algae simply have a plug core, others have an associated membrane at each side of the protein mass, called cap membranes. The pit plug continues to exist between the cells until one of the cells dies. When this happens, the living cell produce a layer of wall material that seals off the plug.

Function

It is thought that the pit connections function as structural reinforcement, and as an avenue for cell to cell communication and/or symplastic transport in red algae. While the presence of the cap membrane could inhibit this transport between cells, it has been hypothesized that the tubular plug cores serve as a means of transport.

Reproduction


The reproductive cycle of red algae may be triggered by factors such as day length.

Fertilisation


Red algae lack motile sperm
Sperm

The term sperm is derived from the Greek word sperma and refers to the male reproductive Cell . In the types of sexual reproduction known as anisogamy and oogamy, there is a marked difference in the size of the gametes with the smaller one being termed the "male" or sperm cell....
. Hence they rely on water currents to transport their gamete
Gamete

A gamete is a Cell that fuses with another gamete during fertilization in organisms that sexual reproduction. In species which produce two morphologically distinct types of gametes, and in which each individual produces only one type, a female is any individual which produces the larger type of gamete?called an ovum ?and a male produces th...
s to the female organs – although their sperm are capable of "gliding" to a carpogonium's trichogyne.

The trichogyne will continue to grow until it encounters a spermatium; once it has been fertilised, the cell wall at its base progressively thickens, separating it from the rest of the carpogonium at its base.

Upon their collision, the walls of the spermatium and carpogonium dissolve. The male nucleus divides and moves into the carpogonium; one half of the nucleus merges with the carpogonium's nucleus.

The polyamine
Polyamine

The polyamines are organic compounds having two or more primary amino groups - such as putrescine, cadaverine, spermidine, and spermine - that are essential molecules in both eukaryotic and prokaryotic cells....
 spermine
Spermine

Spermine is a polyamine involved in cellular metabolism found in all Eukaryote. Formed from spermidine, it is found in a wide variety of organisms and tissues and is an essential growth factor in some Bacterium....
 is produced which triggers carpospore production.

Spermatangia may have long delicate appendages, which increase their chances of "hooking up".

Alternation of phases

They display alternation of phases; as well as a gametophyte
Gametophyte

In plants and algae that undergo alternation of generations, a gametophyte is the multicellular structure, or phase, that is haploid, containing a single set of chromosomes:...
 phase, many have two sporophyte
Sporophyte

All land plants, and some algae, have life cycles in which a haploid gametophyte generation alternates with a diploid sporophyte, the generation of a plant or alga that has a double set of chromosomes....
 phases, the carposporophyte producing carpospores, which germinate into a tetrasporophyte – this produces spore tetrads, which dissociate and germinate into gametophytes. The gametophyte is typically (but not always) identical to the tetrasporophyte.

Carpospores may also germinate directly into thalloid gametophytes, or the carposporophytes may produce a tetraspore without going through a (free living) tetrasporophyte phase. Tetrasporangia may be arranged in a row (Zonate), in a cross (cruciate), or in a tetrad.

The carposporophyte may be enclosed within the gametophyte, which may cover it with branches to form a cystocarp.

A couple of case studies may be helpful to understand some of the life histories algae may display.

In a simple case, such as Rhodochorton
Rhodochorton

Rhodochorton is a genus of filamentous Red algae adapted to low light levels. It may form tufts or a thin purple "turf" up to 5 millimetres high....
 investiens
:

In the Carposporophyte: a spermatium merges with a trichogyne (a long hair on the female sexual organ), which then divides to form carposporangia – which produce carpospores.

Carpospores germinate into gametophytes, which produce sporophytes. Both of these are very similar; they produce monospores from monosporangia "just below a cross wall in a filament" and their spores are "liberated through apex of sporangial cell."

The spores of a sporophyte produce either tetrasporophytes. Monospores produced by this phase germinate immediately, with no resting phase, to form an identical copy of parent. Tetrasporophytes may also produce a carpospore, which germinates to form another tetrasporophyte.

The gametophyte may replicate using monospores, but produces sperm in spermatangia, and "eggs"(?) in carpogonium.

A rather different example is Porphyra
Porphyra

Porphyra is a foliose red algal genus of Laver , comprising approximately 70 species. It grows in the intertidal, typically between the upper intertidal to the splash zone....
 gardneri
:

In its diploid phase, a carpospore can germinate to form a filamentous "conchocelis stage", which can also self-replicate using monospores. The conchocelis stage eventually produces conchosporangia. The resulting conchospore germinates to form a tiny prothallus with rhizoid
Rhizoid

Rhizoids are a structure in plants, fungi and some other organisms that functions like a root in support or absorption.In fungi, rhizoids are small branching hyphae that grow downwards from the stolons that anchor the fungus....
s, which develops to a cm-scale leafy thallus. This too can reproduce via monospores, which are produced inside the thallus itself. They can also reproduce via spermatia, produced internally, which are released to meet a prospective carpogonium in its conceptacle.

Human Consumption

Several species are used as food. Dulse
Dulse

Palmaria palmata Kuntze, also called dulse, dillisk, dilsk or creathnach, is a red alga previously referred to as Rhodymenia palmata Greville....
 (Palmaria palmata) and Porphyra
Porphyra

Porphyra is a foliose red algal genus of Laver , comprising approximately 70 species. It grows in the intertidal, typically between the upper intertidal to the splash zone....
 are the best known in the British Isles
British Isles

The British Isles are a group of islands off the northwest coast of continental Europe that include Great Britain and Ireland, and numerous smaller islands....


In East and Southeast Asia, agar is most commonly produced from Gelidium amansii
Gelidium amansii

Gelidium amansii is an economically important species of red algae commonly found in the shallow coast of many East Asia and Southeast Asian countries....
.

See also

  • Brown algae
    Brown algae

    The Phaeophyceae or brown algae, is a large group of mostly Ocean multicellular algae, including many seaweeds of colder Northern Hemisphere waters....
  • Green algae
    Green algae

    The green algae are the large group of algae from which the embryophytes emerged. As such, they form a paraphyletic group, although the group including both green algae and embryophytes is monophyletic ....
  • Red tide
    Red tide

    "Red tide" is a common name for a phenomenon known as an algal bloom, an event in which estuarine, marine, or fresh water algae accumulate rapidly in the water column....
     (red tides are caused by algae from the phylum Dinoflagellata, and not red algae [Rhodophyta])
  • Françoise Ardré
    Françoise Ardré

    Fran?oise Ardr? is a France phycologist and oceanography; honoured as the namesake of the red alga known as Pterosiphonia ardreana.After she held a Doctorate in Sciences, Ardr? was in charge of the phycology department of the Mus?um national d'Histoire naturelle in Paris....
     (namesake of the red alga known as Pterosiphonia ardreana)
  • History of Phycology
    History of phycology

    Phycology is the study of algae and history is the study of the past human activities. Human interest in plants as food goes back into the origins of the species and knowledge of algae can be traced back more than two thousand years....

External links