Green Algae is one of the most common of all the algaes and easily treated with Algaecide and proper chlorination. Many times you may not even see the algae but the pool walls or floor may feel slippery on your feet and then you will see what is called a full bloom where it turns green/greenish brown and it displays itself on the bottom and walls of the pool. Make sure to test your pool water and get your levels balanced and add your algaecide and I suggest letting the pool run until it is clear. You may have to chlorinate more as your free chlorine will be busy attacking the algae and will be harder to keep at the proper level until it is gone. After 24 hours vacuum the visable algae up (if you have a full bloom of it this may take more than one vacuuming as you will stir the dead algae up and will need to let particles not picked up by vacuum and filter system to settle and revacuum again). more helpful hints at www.prospectpoolsllc.com/blog or www.prospectpoolsllc.com
the fresh water alga, spirogyra, which forms long, thread like colonies called filaments. the cells are stacked end to end.
diatoms
zygnema and spirogyra are examples of filamentous algae
Blue green algae are procaryo and mostly unicellular and form a source of food for other organisms. i.e, why blue green algae are called primitive organisms.
blue green algae is formed when the water in which it is in doesnt wash away and decompose the harsh chemicals.
Golgi apparatus is absent in blue green algae because they do not grow where there is no light.
Blue green algae or cynobacteria are photosynthetic.They produce their food themselves.
zygnema and spirogyra are examples of filamentous algae
blue green algae,Chlamydomonas,diatoms,gelidium, etc..
blue-green algae, blue-green bacteria, and Cyanophyta
blue green algae
Who Discovered Algae. Who Discovered The Philippine Blue Green Algae? ... Gregorio Velasquez is the one who discovered the blue green algae
Blue green algae is toxic so I would take care with it.
Blue green algae or cynobacteria are photosynthetic.They produce their food themselves.
blue green algae has been rename to cyanobacteria because scientists thought that blue green algae is too hard to say
Philippine blue green algae by biologist Gregorio T. Velasquez
Blue green algae are procaryo and mostly unicellular and form a source of food for other organisms. i.e, why blue green algae are called primitive organisms.
its that blue green algae niche is providing food for animals
fungi because it's bacteria and it's blue and green algae.