Charophyta
The scientific name of spirogyra is Spirogyra. It belongs to the genus Spirogyra within the group of green algae.
Spirogyra belongs to the kingdom Plantae and the domain Eukarya.
Water silk algae is another common name for spirogyra, a type of filamentous green algae found in freshwater environments.
Phylum Aschelminthes
for Plato users its C
there are 8 classifications of Thallophyta. these are:- 1. Phylum Myxomycophyta 2. Phylum Eumycophyta 3. Phylum Cyanohyta 4. Phylum Rhodophyta 5. Phylum Crysophyta 6. Phylum Phaeophyta 7. Phylum Euglenophyta 8. Phylum Cholorophyta
Chlorella, Spirogyra, and Ulva are members of phylum Chlorophyta. The organism not in phylum Chlorophyta is diatom, which belongs to the phylum Bacillariophyta.
Similarities: they all belong to the kingdom Fungi and phylum chlorophyta Differences:they have different shapes. Chlamydomonas have eyespot
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 is a green alga. It is currently under controversy when this alga belongs with other algae or with the plants it is so much closer to. Modern classification systems may place green algae under the kingdom Protista, Plantae, fragment Protista into dozens of smaller and more specific kingdoms, or simply note indecision. Classification systems are far from perfect and continue to develop, and controversies on the level of kingdoms take much longer to come to a consensus on.