-
Canada Del Hoyo, Castille la Mancha, Spain
-
Canada Del Hoyo, Castille la Mancha, Spain
-
Caada del Hoyo, Castilla-La Mancha, Espaa
-
Fermoselle, Castilla y Len, Espaa
-
Fermoselle, Castilla y Len, Espaa
-
Arredondo, Cantabria, Spain
-
Gravalos, La Rioja, Spain
-
San Martin De Castaneda, Castille and Leon, Spain
-
Madrid, Comunidad de Madrid, Espaa
-
Madrid, Madrid, Spain
-
Los Cotos, Madrid, Spain
-
Rome, Lazio, Italy
-
Rome, Lazio, Italy
-
Ajamil, La Rioja, Spain
-
Peniscola, Valencia, Spain
-
Prochlorococcus (pro-cloe-row-cock-us) marinus, a tiny globular cyanobacterium (blue-green alga). This type of organism is extremely abundant in the tropical and warm temperate regions of the open oceans, and some scientists claim it is the most abundant organism on earth. Differential interference microscopy.
data on this strain.
-
Portrait of the cyanophyte, Eucapsis alpina (Clements et Shantz, 1909).The spherical gray-green cells are embedded in a clear hyaline mucilage. They divide in three planes gresulting in cuboid colonies.In this image bacteria are adhering to the mucilage surrounding the cells.Colonies are free floating.Collected from a freshwater aquaculture tub near Boise, Idaho.December 2005.Phase contrast.
-
Portrait of the cyanophyte, Eucapsis alpina (Clements et Shantz, 1909).The spherical gray-green cells are embedded in a clear hyaline mucilage. They divide in three planes gresulting in cuboid colonies containing multiples of four cells.In this image bacteria are adhering to the mucilage surrounding the cells.Colonies are free floating.Collected from a freshwater aquaculture tub near Boise, Idaho.December 2005.DIC.
-
Merismopedia (mer-is-mo-pea-dee-a) is a blue-green alga or cyanobacterium (blue-green alga). The genus is distinguished by the square-packed pattern of the coccoid cells. It is common in sediments, but the number of cells which occur in a colony may vary from only a few to thousands. As a cyanobacterium, the photosynthetic pigments are located throughout the cytoplasm. Differential interference contrast
-
Merismopedia (mer-is-mo-pea-dee-a) is a blue-green alga or cyanobacterium. The genus is distinguished by the square-packed pattern of the coccoid cells. It is common in sediments, but the number of cells which occur in a colony may vary from only a few to thousands. As a cyanobacterium, the photosynthetic pigments are located throughout the cytoplasm. These can be seen if the cells are illuminated with ultra-violet light and then the distribution of the pigment detected by the resulting fluorescence. Fluorescence microscopy.
-
Merismopedia (mer-is-mo-pea-dee-a) is a blue-green alga or cyanobacterium. The genus is distinguished by the square-packed pattern of the coccoid cells. It is common in sediments, but the number of cells which occur in a colony may vary from only a few to thousands. As a cyanobacterium, the photosynthetic pigments are located throughout the cytoplasm. Differential interference contrast.
-
Merismopedia (mer-is-mo-pea-dee-a) is a blue-green alga or cyanobacterium. The genus is distinguished by the square-packed pattern of the coccoid cells. It is common in sediments, but the number of cells which occur in a colony may vary from only a few to thousands. As a cyanobacterium, the photosynthetic pigments are located throughout the cytoplasm. Differential interference contrast
-
Merismopedia (mer-is-mo-pea-dee-a) is a blue-green alga or cyanobacterium. The genus is distinguished by the square-packed pattern of the coccoid cells. It is common in sediments, but the number of cells which occur in a colony may vary from only a few to thousands. As a cyanobacterium, the photosynthetic pigments are located throughout the cytoplasm. Differential interference contrast
-
Merismopedia. Colony observed in sandy and muddy marine sediments in the vicinity of Broome, Western Australia in September 2003. This image was taken using differential interference contrast optics. This work was supported by the Australian Biological Resources Study.