Want this question answered?
AP Bio take home test, huh? Taking it as we speak. Answer is B. Cholorphytes (unless your teacher scrambled the answers or mine did then it would be a different letter, but the answer is chlorophytes).
No
red tide
Yes, Brown algae differs from Red and Green algae because Brown algae is used as a thickener in alot of foods. Red and Green algae are used for most of the time for fish and other underwater animals to eat.
Red tide?
dinoflagellates tint the sea water to a reddish color.
---- Its in a group of alga-es and its diatoms, green algae, red algae, brown algae, dinoflagellates, and euglenoids.
AP Bio take home test, huh? Taking it as we speak. Answer is B. Cholorphytes (unless your teacher scrambled the answers or mine did then it would be a different letter, but the answer is chlorophytes).
Algae,dinoflagellates
No
no
Estuarine, marine, or fresh water algae is responsible for toxic red times. The algae accumulates rapidly in the water column discoloring the water's surface.
red, brown and green algae
There are lots of different kinds ofo algae. There are Chlorophytes (green algae) Rhodophytes (red algae), chrysophyta ( golden/brown algae) and lots more!
Depends on the algae. Roughly speaking (this is not exhaustive), these are some of the major algal groups:Green algae - Aquatic relatives of plants.Red algae - Similar to green algae, but containing a red pigment.Brown algae - Many-celled aquatic algae, including kelp.Golden algae - Single-celled "plants" that form glass shells around them. Also called diatoms.Fire algae - Flagellate algae that whirl around when swimming. Also called dinoflagellates.
red tide
Shaoul Ezekiel has written: 'Spectrofluorometric differentiation of the red tide alga, Gonyaulax tamarensis from other algae common to New England waters' -- subject- s -: Red tide, Fluorescence spectroscopy, Dinoflagellates