there are three. Chlorophyta (green algae) Phaeophyta (brown algae) and Rhodophyta (red algae). The main differences are the photosynthesis pigments, green being chlorophill A, brown being chlorophill C, and red being phycobillians. penis.
ascophylum
mollusca
chlorella
The Sargasso Sea, between the Azores and the West Indies is a calm area with an abundance of floating seaweed of the genus Sargassum.
phaeophyta (brown algae) The largest brown algae may reach over 30 meters in length. Phaeophytes, have traditionally been classified as plants. However, phaeophytes are not closely related to land plants; their cells contain different pigments, such as chlorophyll c and fucoxanthin. They also lack the plasmodesmata and starch production of land plants and their relatives.
Molokhia, or the edible leaf of the Corchorus genus of plants, is a versatile leaf - often underutilized in New World cuisine - which packs a powerful mineral punch basically its not seaweed hope that helps
by hiding in seaweed by hiding in seaweed by hiding in seaweed by hiding in seaweed
seaweed seaweed seaweed
No, kale is not seaweed. Perhaps you mean "kelp" which is a seaweed.
Ulva is a genus of green seaweed commonly known as sea lettuce, found in marine environments. Chara is a genus of green algae known as stoneworts, typically found in freshwater habitats like lakes and ponds. Both are photosynthetic organisms that play important roles in aquatic ecosystems.
Answer Seaweed is not an animal of the sea's it's a plant.
seaweed seaweed
Seaweed? Plants.
Seaweed is renewable!
No, seaweed is a plant.