One genus is Karena, I think.
Yes, phycobilins are photosynthetic pigments found in certain types of algae, cyanobacteria, and red algae. They help capture light energy and transfer it to chlorophyll for photosynthesis.
Dinoflagellate blooms
The colored chemical compounds in plants that absorb light are called pigments. The main pigments responsible for absorbing light in plants are chlorophyll (green), carotenoids (orange and yellow), and anthocyanins (red, purple, and blue). These pigments play a crucial role in photosynthesis, the process by which plants convert light energy into chemical energy.
Phytoplankton, colonial, filamenous, and multicellular
Yes, all plant leaf cells contain chlorophyll or one of the other photosynthetic pigments. The leaves are red, because they have other (photosynthetic)pigments in them which give them their colour
thylacoids contain photosynthetic pigments chlorophylla and β-carote. There are othe pigments (red- phycoenthrin, blue- phycocyan)
Yes, phycobilins are photosynthetic pigments found in certain types of algae, cyanobacteria, and red algae. They help capture light energy and transfer it to chlorophyll for photosynthesis.
Dinoflagellates are plankton that have two flagella and are known to cause red tides. These single-celled organisms can undergo rapid population growth, leading to a harmful algal bloom that can discolor the water and produce toxins harmful to marine life and humans.
blue, red and yellow
plants how plants grow oxygen is needed takes places in the plants chloroplast
Dinoflagellate blooms
Dinoflagellate blooms
Dinoflagellate blooms
Dinoflagellates are single-celled organisms that have two flagella for movement, many species are photosynthetic and can contain chlorophyll, giving them a yellow or brownish coloration, and they produce neurotoxins that can cause harmful algal blooms and red tides in marine environments.
The color that results from mixing red and yellow pigments is orange.
The colored chemical compounds in plants that absorb light are called pigments. The main pigments responsible for absorbing light in plants are chlorophyll (green), carotenoids (orange and yellow), and anthocyanins (red, purple, and blue). These pigments play a crucial role in photosynthesis, the process by which plants convert light energy into chemical energy.
Absorbing and reflecting the sun's different wavelengths describes the way that non-green leaves prepare food. Chlorophyll is just one of a number of photosynthetic pigments and looks green because it absorbs blue and red wavelengths and reflects green. Other photosynthetic pigments prepare food by absorbing other wavelengths, such as infrared and ultraviolet, both of which are undetectable by the human eye.