Spyrogyra itself is autotrops which mean it can prepare it's own food by themself.It synthesize food by the process of photosynthesis with the help of chlorophyll pigment.It prepare food by using carbondioxide and water in presence of sunlight.It store food material are carbohydrate,laminarin,etc.in the form of starch,floridosite.It utilizes those material for its living propose.Some spirogyra are symbiont which gets it food from it's composition.
yes,spirogyra does have a cell wall and they also have chloroplasts
No, Spirogyra is a type of filamentous green algae that does not have traditional plant structures like stems, roots, and leaves. Instead, Spirogyra consists of long, unbranched filaments made up of cells containing chloroplasts for photosynthesis.
Spirogyra are isogametes as the two participating gametes are similar in size and morphology.
Spirogyra is a green algae.It has a cell wall.
Spirogyra is typically autotrophic, meaning it can produce its own food through photosynthesis. However, under certain conditions, Spirogyra can also take in organic nutrients from its environment and exhibit mixotrophic behavior.
I think bacteria eats it.
You would speak of Spirogyra in terms of the species of Spirogyra: "there are over 400 species of Spirogyra"
spirogyra is a water silk
The scientific name of spirogyra is Spirogyra. It belongs to the genus Spirogyra within the group of green algae.
yes spirogyra does have a nucles
Spirogyra belongs to the kingdom Plantae and the domain Eukarya.
Spirogyra - band - was created in 1967.
yes,spirogyra does have a cell wall and they also have chloroplasts
No. Spirogyra is a Jazz Band. Spirulina is a single celled algae.
Spirogyra are NOT branched, whereas Cladophora are branched. Branched meaning that the filaments "come out" of each other. Spirogyra are long filaments with no protruding filaments.
Spirogyra is an algae that is found in slow moving rivers and ponds. Spirogyra does not have any ability to move on it's own, and only moves as the water moves.
Spirogyra was first described by the botanist William Henry Harvey in the mid-19th century. However, the genus name "Spirogyra" was coined by the German botanist Heinrich Friedrich Link in 1820. Spirogyra is a genus of green algae known for its characteristic spiral chloroplasts.