Green algae belong to the family Chlorophyceae, which is a diverse group of photosynthetic organisms that typically have chlorophyll a and b and store starch as a food reserve.
Caulerpa belongs to the kingdom Plantae as it is a type of green algae.
Desmids are also known as Desmidiaceae, which is the family name for this group of green algae characterized by their unique cell structure and symmetry.
blue-green algae, blue-green bacteria, and Cyanophyta
The largest algae belong to the phylum Phaeophyta, also known as brown algae. Brown algae include seaweeds such as kelp, which can grow to be quite large in size.
Horses belong to the Equidae family.
All algae belong to protista
All algae belong to protista
No, algae do not belong to the Kingdom Fungi. All algae belong in the unranked classification Archaeplastida, and green algae also belong to the Kingdom Plantae.
Plantae
The answer to that question varies depending on the type of algae. Blue Green algae belongs to Monera Unicellular algae: Protista Multicultural algae the most common such as Red, Brown, and green algae belong to the Metaphyta (plantae) kingdom
Plantae. The plant kingdom.
Kingdom Protista
fungi because it's bacteria and it's blue and green algae.
Green algae belong to Kingdom Protista. Green algae is a very diverse type of algae. Actually, green algae is sort of similar to plants. The green algae contain two forms of chlorophyll and capture light energy to produce sugar in similar with the plant. However, unlike the plants the green algae are aquatic. The species are named algae because they are aquatic and make their own food.
I believe Green algae are members of the Protist family because they are plant like bacteria i believe but im not entirely sure
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).
Some green algae are unicellular