Characiochloris Explained

Characiochloris is a genus of green algae in the family Characiochloridaceae.[1] Characiochloris is epiphytic on freshwater algae, or found in soil.

Description

Characiochloris is a unicellular organism in which the cells are attached to a substrate by an adhesive pad. They are egg-shaped to spindle-shaped with the apical end attached to the substrate. Cells are always uninucleate (with one The chloroplast is parietal, usually dissected into many elongated lobes, and with one or more pyrenoids. Some species have a stigma. Contractile vacuoles are present, and irregular distributed throughout the cell.[2]

Characiochloris reproduces asexually via biflagellate zoospores. Each zoospore has a band-shaped chloroplast, a pyrenoid, a stigma, and contractile vacuoles. Sexual reproduction has not been observed in this genus.

Species are separated from each other by their size and shape, number of pyrenoids, and their chloroplast morphology.

Notes and References

  1. See the NCBI webpage on Characiochloris. Data extracted from the Web site: NCBI taxonomy resources . . 2007-03-19.
  2. Book: Ettl. Hanuš. Gärtner. Georg. Syllabus der Boden-, Luft- und Flechtenalgen. 2nd. 2013. Springer-Verlag. 9783642394614. de.