red, brown and green algae
The most commonly encountered groups of freshwater algae are green algae, diatoms, and blue-green algae
neither. algae, bacteria and fungi are all separate groups of classification
Algae are classified into several groups based on their pigmentation and reproductive structures. The main groups include Chlorophyta (green algae), Phaeophyta (brown algae), and Rhodophyta (red algae). Within these groups, there is further classification based on characteristics such as cell structure and habitat.
Phytoplankton, colonial, filamenous, and multicellular
There are lots of different kinds ofo algae. There are Chlorophytes (green algae) Rhodophytes (red algae), chrysophyta ( golden/brown algae) and lots more!
fungus and algae
Protozoa and Algae
All algae are plant-like protists, and it depends on how you are grouping them.
Actually, most algae is classified in the kingdom Protista. Cyanobacteria (also algae) is classified as a bacteria. Very few organisms that take the common name "algae" are still classified as plants. Response: So, no, algae is not a plant Response: yes
The three types of multicellular algae are red algae, brown algae, and green algae. These groups are classified based on their pigments, cell wall composition, and overall appearance. Each type of algae plays a unique role in aquatic ecosystems.
The two major groups of protists are protozoa (animal-like protists) and algae (plant-like protists). Protozoa are unicellular organisms that can be parasitic or free-living, while algae are photosynthetic protists that can be unicellular or multicellular.
Blue green algae and archaebacteria