dcsimg

Chaetophora-spec-Insert-INET800_HID

Image of Chaetophoropsis B. Wen Liu, Qian Xiong, X. Dong Liu, Z. Yu Hu & G. Xing Liu 2019

Description:

Chaetophora is a branched filamentous alga almost wholly embedded in mucilage. The species shown forms pads which can grow large enough to be visible to the naked eye as green, jelly globes adhered to stones or plants. The mucilage is a protection against ingestion. On the surface of this jelly globes one can see a lot of colorless cells formed as hairs (chaetae) projecting out of the jelly. This cells contain no chloroplasts and serve for nutrient uptake. The bright field photo doesnt display the mucilage. This young specimen showed only two projecting cells (see inset). The arrow idicates a pyrenoid within a chloroplast. Collected from Bodden, the brackish waters lying between the isles of Hiddensee and Ruegen (German Baltic Sea). This image was taken using Zeiss Universal with Olympus C7070 CCD camera.For permission to use of (high-resolution) images please contact postmaster@protisten.de.

Source Information

license
cc-by-nc-sa
copyright
Wolfgang Bettighofer
photographer
Wolfgang Bettighofer
original
original media file
visit source
partner site
Flickr Group
ID
00131fc1f185002523293328281fce25