Macroalgae
Definition
1. Introduction
2. Microalgae versus Macroalgae
3. Ecology
4. Pigment Composition and Classification
- Green macroalgae are included in the phylum Chlorophyta, and their pigmentation is identical to that of vascular plants (chlorophylls a and b and carotenoids);
- Red macroalgae belong to the phylum Rhodophyta; they have chlorophyll a, phycobilins, and some carotenoids as photosynthetic pigments;
- Brown macroalgae belong to the phylum Ochrophyta, and all of them are grouped in the class Phaeophyceae; their pigments are chlorophylls a and c and carotenoids (where fucoxanthin predominates, responsible for their brownish color);
- Blue-green algae are included in the phylum Cyanobacteria; they have chlorophyll a (green), carotenoids (yellow), phycocyanin (blue), and, in some species, phycoerythrin (red) (both phycobilins).
5. Morphological Types
5.1. Main Morphological Characteristics of Macroalgae
5.1.1. Filamentous Thalli
5.1.2. Massive Thalli
- Cylindrical shafts, also called “strings”, normally erect when immersed, sometimes appearing prostrate, that can branch out according to the abovementioned modalities;
- Cylindrical or flattened tubes (seeFigure 4c), when the thalli are hollow, and their walls are composed of one or more layers of cells and the tube axes may present constrictions at regular intervals (articulated thalli);
- Sheets, monostromatic (one layer of cells) or polistromatic (two or more layers of cells) (seeFigure 4d);
- Vesicular, when the thalli, usually polistromatic, have a globose shape (seeFigure 4f).
5.2. Thalli Growth
- Apical, when the divisions are restricted to one or more cells in the apical zone of the thallus;
- Diffuse, when divisions occur in different parts of the stem;
- Marginal (laminar thalli), when only the most peripheral cells divide regularly;
- In kelp, growth occurs at the base of the meristem, where the blades and stipe meet.
6. Reproduction in Algae
6.1. Asexual Reproduction
- By thalli fragmentation, in which each piece originates a new thallus and reconstitutes a new individual;
- By means of propagules, that is, through a small cluster of cells, with the ability to attach to a substrate and functionally originate a new thallus;
- Through spores, which are cells formed inside sporocysts (specialized structures, originating from modified mother cells) that result from mitotic divisions of the nucleus of the mother cell. At the end of their differentiation, the spores are released to the outside of the sporocysts (into the aquatic environment) through an opening in their wall. Depending on the species, the spores may be immobile (aplanospores, floating in the water column) or mobile (zoospores, moving with scourges, using whip movements). In both cases, the spores have the purpose of promoting the dispersion of the species, attaching themselves to a new and distant substrate, germinating and originating a new stem there. Some spores are true forms of resistance (akinetes or hypnospores), being provided with a thick and impermeable wall that allows them to pass brief periods of dormancy, essential characteristics necessary for survival in adverse environmental conditions.
6.2. Sexual Reproduction
- Planogamy, isogamous or heterogamous, in which both gametes are mobile, and fertilization occurs between these mobile cells (similar or not), giving rise to a swimmer pair (plano-zygotes), during the period in which their fusion in the zygote occurs;
- Anisogamy or heterogamy, in which the male gamete meets the female gamete, usually larger and most often devoid of flagella, and merges with it. In red algae, a particular type of oogamy occurs, as it occurs between different gametes, both of which are not flagellated. In this case, fertilization occurs in situ, that is, in the place where the female gamete formed.
6.3. Formation of Gametes
6.4. The Reproductive Structures of Red Algae
- Total absence of centrioles and any flagellate phase;
- Presence of chlorophylls a and d, and accessory pigments (light-harvest) called phycobilins (phycoerythrin and phycocyanin);
- Plastids with unstacked thylakoids and no external endoplasmic reticulum;
- Absence of parenchyma and presence of pit-connections between cells (i.e., incomplete cytokinesis);
- Floridean starch as storage product.
- A unicellular group with reproduction by binary cell division only;
- A multicellular group where a carpogonial branch is absent or incipient (Bangiophyceae sensu lato);
- A multicellular group with well-developed carpogonial branches (Florideophyceae).
7. Macroalgae Uses
7.1. Human Food and Animal Feed
7.2. Agriculture
7.3. Industry
7.4. Pharmaceuticals and Cosmetics
8. Global Production of Macroalgae
9. Conclusions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Entry Link on the Encyclopedia Platform
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| Phylum (*) | Class | Chlorophylls | Carotenoids | Phycobilins |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cyanobacteria | Cyanophyceae (**) | a | β-carotene, myxoxanthophyll, zeaxanthin | C-phycocyanin (+) C-phycoerythrin (−) |
| Chlorophyta | Bryopsidophyceae Siphonocladophyceae Ulvophyceae | a, b | β-carotene, lutein, neoxanthin, violaxanthin, zeaxanthin | - |
| Rhodophyta | Bangiophyceae Florideophyceae | a, d | β-carotene, lutein, zeaxanthin | R-phycocyanin (−) R-phycoerythrin (+) |
| Ochrophyta | Phaeophyceae | a, c | β-carotene, fucoxanthin, violaxanthin |
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Pereira, L. Macroalgae.Encyclopedia2021,1, 177-188. https://doi.org/10.3390/encyclopedia1010017
Pereira L. Macroalgae.Encyclopedia. 2021; 1(1):177-188. https://doi.org/10.3390/encyclopedia1010017
Chicago/Turabian StylePereira, Leonel. 2021. "Macroalgae"Encyclopedia 1, no. 1: 177-188. https://doi.org/10.3390/encyclopedia1010017
APA StylePereira, L. (2021). Macroalgae.Encyclopedia,1(1), 177-188. https://doi.org/10.3390/encyclopedia1010017




