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Chaetosphaeridium
''Chaetosphaeridium'' is a genus of green algae. Several classifications have been proposed. Its traditional classification is in the order Coleochaetales, related to the genus ''Coleochaete''. AlgaeBase places it in the order Chaetosphaeridiales. Species Species include: * '' C. globosum'' * '' C. huberi'' * '' C. minus'' * '' C. ovalis'' * '' C. pringsheimii'' GBIF The Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) is an international organisation that focuses on making scientific data on biodiversity available via the Internet using web services. The data are provided by many institutions from around the ... only accepts ''Chaetosphaeridium globosum'', ''Chaetosphaeridium ovalis'' and ''Chaetosphaeridium pringsheimii''. References Charophyta Charophyta genera {{green alga-stub ...
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Chaetosphaeridium Minus
''Chaetosphaeridium'' is a genus of green algae. Several classifications have been proposed. Its traditional classification is in the order Coleochaetales, related to the genus ''Coleochaete''. AlgaeBase places it in the order Chaetosphaeridiales. Species Species include: * '' C. globosum'' * '' C. huberi'' * '' C. minus'' * '' C. ovalis'' * '' C. pringsheimii'' GBIF The Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) is an international organisation that focuses on making scientific data on biodiversity available via the Internet using web services. The data are provided by many institutions from around the ... only accepts ''Chaetosphaeridium globosum'', ''Chaetosphaeridium ovalis'' and ''Chaetosphaeridium pringsheimii''. References Charophyta Charophyta genera {{green alga-stub ...
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Chaetosphaeridium Huberi
''Chaetosphaeridium'' is a genus of green algae. Several classifications have been proposed. Its traditional classification is in the order Coleochaetales, related to the genus ''Coleochaete''. AlgaeBase places it in the order Chaetosphaeridiales. Species Species include: * '' C. globosum'' * '' C. huberi'' * '' C. minus'' * '' C. ovalis'' * '' C. pringsheimii'' GBIF The Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) is an international organisation that focuses on making scientific data on biodiversity available via the Internet using web services. The data are provided by many institutions from around the ... only accepts ''Chaetosphaeridium globosum'', ''Chaetosphaeridium ovalis'' and ''Chaetosphaeridium pringsheimii''. References Charophyta Charophyta genera {{green alga-stub ...
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Chaetosphaeridium Ovalis
''Chaetosphaeridium'' is a genus of green algae. Several classifications have been proposed. Its traditional classification is in the order Coleochaetales, related to the genus ''Coleochaete''. AlgaeBase places it in the order Chaetosphaeridiales. Species Species include: * '' C. globosum'' * '' C. huberi'' * '' C. minus'' * '' C. ovalis'' * '' C. pringsheimii'' GBIF The Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) is an international organisation that focuses on making scientific data on biodiversity available via the Internet using web services. The data are provided by many institutions from around the ... only accepts ''Chaetosphaeridium globosum'', ''Chaetosphaeridium ovalis'' and ''Chaetosphaeridium pringsheimii''. References Charophyta Charophyta genera {{green alga-stub ...
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Chaetosphaeridium Pringsheimii
''Chaetosphaeridium'' is a genus of green algae. Several classifications have been proposed. Its traditional classification is in the order Coleochaetales, related to the genus ''Coleochaete''. AlgaeBase places it in the order Chaetosphaeridiales. Species Species include: * '' C. globosum'' * '' C. huberi'' * '' C. minus'' * '' C. ovalis'' * '' C. pringsheimii'' GBIF The Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) is an international organisation that focuses on making scientific data on biodiversity available via the Internet using web services. The data are provided by many institutions from around the ... only accepts ''Chaetosphaeridium globosum'', ''Chaetosphaeridium ovalis'' and ''Chaetosphaeridium pringsheimii''. References Charophyta Charophyta genera {{green alga-stub ...
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Chaetosphaeridium Globosum
''Chaetosphaeridium globosum'' is a one-celled alga which is thought to represent an ancient lineage of the green plants. This organism exists in a filamentous form with one flagella per cell. It is a freshwater species. The flagellum is covered in scales in a 3-prong irregular shape called ‘maple leafs’. The cells are usually in diameter and with one pyrenoid. Each cell bears long bristle. Researchers have found that the mitochondrial DNA of ''Chaetosphaeridium'' is markedly different from that of land plants, suggesting that the mitochondria of land plants evolved significantly after the common ancestor between them and living green algae. A very slight similarity exists between liverwort mtDNA and ''Chaetosphaeridium''. The chloroplast DNA is markedly similar, however, indicating that a close relationship had existed between the Viridiplantae and the clade that includes ''Chaetosphaeridium''. This seems to argue that chloroplasts in green plants originated in prehistoric g ...
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Green Algae
The green algae (singular: green alga) are a group consisting of the Prasinodermophyta and its unnamed sister which contains the Chlorophyta and Charophyta/Streptophyta. The land plants (Embryophytes) have emerged deep in the Charophyte alga as sister of the Zygnematophyceae. Since the realization that the Embryophytes emerged within the green algae, some authors are starting to properly include them. The completed clade that includes both green algae and embryophytes is monophyletic and is referred to as the clade Viridiplantae and as the kingdom Plantae. The green algae include unicellular and colonial flagellates, most with two flagella per cell, as well as various colonial, coccoid and filamentous forms, and macroscopic, multicellular seaweeds. There are about 22,000 species of green algae. Many species live most of their lives as single cells, while other species form coenobia (colonies), long filaments, or highly differentiated macroscopic seaweeds. A few other organi ...
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Coleochaetales
Coleochaetaceae is a family of algae. It is the only family in the Coleochaetales, an order of parenchymous charophyte algae, that includes some of the closest multicellular relatives of land plants. They questionably include the fossil genus ''Parka A parka or anorak is a type of coat with a hood, often lined with fur or faux fur. This kind of garment is a staple of Inuit clothing, traditionally made from caribou or seal skin, for hunting and kayaking in the frigid Arctic. Some Inuit ano ...''. References Charophyta Green algae orders {{alga-stub ...
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Coleochaete
''Coleochaete'' is a genus of parenchymatous charophyte green algae in the order Coleochaetales. They are haploid, reproduce both sexually and asexually, and have true multicellular organisation, with plasmodesmata communicating between adjacent cells. The plants form flat, sprawling discs on solid surfaces in freshwater streams worldwide, usually as epiphytes on aquatic plants or growing on the surface of stones. They are seen as one of two most probable sister groups to land plant species, the second candidate group being the Characeae. The issue is still not resolved. As they show some of the earliest and simplest features of multicellular plant growth, they are ideal model organisms in the field of synthetic biology. They are easy to culture and techniques that have been used to study ''Arabidopsis thaliana'' are now being applied to ''Coleochaete''. Experimental systems for plant morphogenesis ''Coleochaete'' has a sterile jacket of cells that surround the gametangia and z ...
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American Journal Of Botany
The ''American Journal of Botany'' is a monthly peer-reviewed scientific journal which covers all aspects of plant biology. It has been published by the Botanical Society of America since 1914. The journal has an impact factor of 3.038, as of 2019. As of 2018, access is available through the publisher John Wiley & Sons (Wiley). From 1951 to 1953, Oswald Tippo served as its editor; the current editor is Pamela Diggle. History In the early 20th century, the field of botany was rapidly expanding, but the publications in which botanists could publish remained limited and heavily backlogged. By 1905, it was estimated that 250,000 contributions were generated in 8 or 9 languages. At the 1911 annual meeting of the society in Washington D.C., it was noted that at least 300 pages of American botanical contributions were sent abroad for publication, with a backlog resulting in a one-year delay in publication. On 31 December 1907, the Botanical Society of America met in Chicago and formal ...
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AlgaeBase
AlgaeBase is a global species database of information on all groups of algae, both marine and freshwater, as well as sea-grass. History AlgaeBase began in March 1996, founded by Michael Guiry. Text was copied from this source, which is available under Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)licence. (Sehere. By 2005, the database contained about 65,000 names. In 2013, AlgaeBase and the Flanders Marine Institute (VLIZ) signed an end-user license agreement regarding the Electronic Intellectual Property of AlgaeBase. This allows the World Register of Marine Species (WoRMS) to include taxonomic names of algae in WoRMS, thereby allowing WoRMS, as part of the Aphia database, to make its overview of all described marine species more complete. Synchronisation of the AlgaeBase data with Aphia and WoRMS was undertaken manually until March 2015, but this was very time-consuming, so an online application was developed to semi-automate the synchronisation, launching in 2015 in conju ...
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GBIF
The Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) is an international organisation that focuses on making scientific data on biodiversity available via the Internet using web services. The data are provided by many institutions from around the world; GBIF's information architecture makes these data accessible and searchable through a single portal. Data available through the GBIF portal are primarily distribution data on plants, animals, fungi, and microbes for the world, and scientific names data. The mission of the GBIF is to facilitate free and open access to biodiversity data worldwide to underpin sustainable development. Priorities, with an emphasis on promoting participation and working through partners, include mobilising biodiversity data, developing protocols and standards to ensure scientific integrity and interoperability, building an informatics architecture to allow the interlinking of diverse data types from disparate sources, promoting capacity building and catal ...
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