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Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6
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Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Dec 26, 2015

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Nora Gilbert
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Page 1: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Multicellular Primary ProducersSeaweeds and Plants

Chapter 6

Page 2: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

All photosynthetic?

Most are photosynthetic but of course there are exceptions

Some are not photosynthetic and are actually parasites of other seaweeds!

Page 3: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

The role of seaweeds

• Transform solar every to chemical energy in the form of organic matter– Energy is then available for consumption

• Habitat• Oxygen producers

Page 4: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Structure of seaweeds

• Seaweeds are eukaryotic

• Seaweeds still lack the specialized structures and reproductive mechanisms characteristic of terrestrial plants

• Wide range of variation among seaweeds

Page 5: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Variation

• Rocky shore- small and sturdy to withstand waves– Some delicate ones live on other seaweeds

• Kelps- found offshore in cold waters (giants)

Page 6: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

General Structure

• Seaweeds lack true leaves, stems, and roots of plants.

• Thallus- Complete body• Blades- Leaf-like flattened portions of the thallus, large

surface area, photosynthesis• Pneumatocysts- Gas-filled bladders that can keep

blades close to sea surface• Stipe- Stem-like structure for support, blades originate • Holdfast- Attaches the thallus to the bottom and well

developed in kelps

Page 7: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Structure

Page 8: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Types of Seaweeds

• Three types• 1) Green• 2) Brown• 3) Red

Page 9: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Green Algae

• Most are freshwater and terrestrial• 10% of the 7,000 species are marine• Most have a simple thallus compared to the

other 2 groups• Thought that land plants evolved from green

algae– Pigments and food reserve are the same

Page 10: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Where do green algae live?

• Common on rocks in shallow water • Rocky shore tide pools

Page 11: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Types of green seaweeds

• Filamentous types may be branched or unbranched • Enteromorpha- thin thallus in the form of a hollow

tube• Ulva- Sea lettuce is paper thin• Valonia- forms large spheres or curious spherical

clusters.• Caulerpa- Single giant cell with many nuclei• Codium- Deadman’s fingers• Halimeda- Calcareous green algae (coral reefs)

Page 12: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Enteromorpha

Page 13: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Ulva

Page 14: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Valonia

Page 15: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Caulerpa

Page 16: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Codium

Page 17: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Halimeda

Page 18: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Brown Algae

• Coloration – varies from olive green to dark brown– Fucoxanthin over chlorophyll

• Almost all of the 1500 species are marine• Often the dominant primary producers on

temperate and polar rocky coasts.• Largest and structurally most complex (Include

the kelps)

Page 19: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Types of Brown Algae

• Ectocarpus- Finely filamentous thallus • Dictyota – thallus is flat and branched• Padina- Fan-shaped and lightly calcified• Desmaretia- branched

• Some are exposed at low tides at the middle and upper levels of rocky shores

• Gas-filled floats – rockweeds or wracks

Page 20: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Sargassum

• Brown algae found in warm waters (Gulfs of Mexico and California)

• Sargasso weed has spherical air bladders to keep small leaf like blades afloat

• Most grow on rocks• Offshore in huge masses• Sargasso Sea– Area in Atlantic

Page 21: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Sargasso Sea

Page 22: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Sargassum Sea

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JFxhlyJ3U4Q

Page 23: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Kelps

• Most complex and largest of all brown algae• Great importance – provide food and shelter for many

organisms. • Laminaria- species of kelp where a single large blade can be

up to 10 ft• Agarum and Alaria – Rib runs along the middle of a single

blade• Egregia- Feather boa kelp• Eisenia- Southern sea palm• Nereocystis- Bull kelp• Pelagophycus- Antler like branches

Page 24: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Brown Algaes

• kelp.gifkelp.gif

Ectocarpus

Dictyota

Padina

Desmarestia

Laninaria

Agarum

Alaria

Egregia

Nereocystis

PelagophycusEisnia

Page 25: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Macrocystis

• Largest of kelps• Massive holdfast attaches to the bottom• At the base of each blade a gas-filled

pneumatocyst• Can grow 20 in per day in optimal conditions• Form kelp beds or forests– Among the richest, most productive environments

in the marine world

Page 26: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Kelp Forest

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GcbU4bfkDA4

• What coast of North America can they be found?

• What do kelps consist of?• What do young kelp compete for?• What do fish use the kelp forest for?• Why does the canopy make a good nursery

environment?

Page 27: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Red Algae

• More red algae that green and brown combined

• Red pigments known as phycobilins• Essentially marine– Of the 4000 species, only a few are fresh water or

soil• Live in most shallow-water marine

environments

Page 28: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Structure of Reds

• Simplified in structure by becoming parasites of other seaweeds

• A few have lost all chlorophyll and are heterotophs

• Most are filamentous – Thickness, width, arrangement of filaments varies

Page 29: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Types of Reds

• Gelidium • Gracilaria• Endocladia – wirey clumps on rocky shores from Alaska

to S. Ca.• Gigartina- Most massive of the red algae• Porphyra-Common on rocky shores above the lowest

tide mark• Rhodymenia –Common in North Atlantic• Chondrus –Irish moss and can tolerate wide ranges in

temp, light and salinity

Page 30: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Red Algae

• en

Gelidium Gracilaria

Endocladia

Gigartina

Porphyra

Rhodymenia

Chondrus

Page 31: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Coralline Algae (Corallina)

• Red algae that deposit calcium carbonate in their cell walls

• Important in several marine environments • Calcified thallus takes a variety of shapes• Color varies from light to intense reddish-pink• Warm-water coralline algae are actively

involved in formation and development of coral reefs

Page 32: Multicellular Primary Producers Seaweeds and Plants Chapter 6.

Bingo• Thallus• Blades• Pneumatocysts• Stipe• Holdfast • Green algae• Red algae• Brown algae• Enteromorpha• Ulva• Valonia• Caulerpa• Halimeda• Gigartina• Chondrus

• Fucoxanthin• Ectocarpus• Dictyota• Padina• Desmarestia• Rockweeds• Sargasso Sea• Laminaria• Nereocystis• Pelagophycus• Macrocystis• Kelp forest• Phycobilins• Coralline algae• Gracilaria• Porphyra