The same form of chlorophyll.
Chlorophyll
Yes, algae are non-vascular plant-like organisms that belong to the kingdom Protista rather than the Plantae kingdom. Algae lack true roots, stems, and leaves, which are characteristic of plants.
Probably the Chloroplast.
The ancestral group to all members of the Plant Kingdom is thought to be a group of freshwater green algae called Charophytes. These algae share many characteristics with land plants, such as similar cell structure and reproductive mechanisms. It is believed that plants evolved from these ancient green algae ancestors.
algae is not a plant.
algae is a producer because it is a sea plant.
If you are being strict about "plant", then yes. For example seaweed is an algae, not a plant - it doesn't have roots. Some plants have very reduced roots, mosses for example.
"Algae" is a general term that includes plants and bacteria... but algae is a plant, and it does exist in reefs.
Algae belong to plant kingdom. Hence these are not flesh.
Yes, algae is a plant that grows in the sea.
"Algae" is a general term that includes plants and bacteria... but algae is a plant, and it does exist in reefs.
Probably the green algae, which descended from cyanobacteria. Seaweeds come in three colours, green, brown and red, and each has different photosynthetic mechanisms - not only chlorophyll. The intertidal zone may have played an important part in the colonization of the land from aquatic plants.
A.mitochondriaB.nucleiC.ribosomesD.chloroplasts