yes
Blue green algae or cynobacteria are photosynthetic.They produce their food themselves.
No, green algae do not produce seeds. Most green algae reproduce through cell division, spores, or fragmentation rather than seeds. Seeds are a structure produced by seed plants for reproductive purposes.
Blue green algae or cynobacteria are photosynthetic.They produce their food themselves.
Plants and algae can produce a slimy substance in a lake. Blue-green algae is the most dangerous type of algae for a lake to have because it can produce toxins.
Green algae belong to Kingdom Protista. Green algae is a very diverse type of algae. Actually, green algae is sort of similar to plants. The green algae contain two forms of chlorophyll and capture light energy to produce sugar in similar with the plant. However, unlike the plants the green algae are aquatic. The species are named algae because they are aquatic and make their own food.
because it dont need one to produce its water and food
No, they produce Co2 which is used for plants to breathe then the plants produce oxygen. This is wrong. Green algae produce 70 to 80% of the oxygen on earth. We would not exist without them.
Algae can get nitrogen from poop or animal waste (it absorbs it by the way) make sure that if you want to feed algae you give it light and warm water, because it grows better in summer than winter. here is the website that my friend's mom found http://fcps.edu/islandcreekes/ecology/green_algae.htm
There are several marine animals that may eat green hair algae, such as hermit crabs, turbo snails, Tang fish, and certain species of sea urchins. It is important to research each species' diet and compatibility with your aquarium before introducing them to help control green hair algae growth.
Green algae are not decomposers; they are photosynthetic organisms that produce their own food through photosynthesis. Decomposers are organisms like fungi and bacteria that break down dead organic matter into simpler forms.
The scientific name for green algae is Chlorophyta.
blue green algae