Are chlorella, chlorella, tremor algae prokaryotes, or eukaryotes?

Updated on healthy 2024-03-27
9 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    Chlorella, chlorella are algae of the phylum Chlorophyta and are eukaryotes.

    Tremor algae are algae of the phylum Cyanobacteria and are prokaryotes.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Chlorella is eukaryotic.

    Chlorella have photosynthetic pigments, and typical green algae cells may or may not be motile. Cells** have vacuoles, pigments are distributed in plastids, and the shape of plastids varies with species. The cell wall is made up of two layers of cellulose and pectin.

    Common green algae in activated sludge are chlorella and sponges.

    The cells of green algae plants are similar to those of higher plants, with nuclei and chloroplasts, and similar pigments, nutrients, and cell wall components. Chlorophyll a and b are the most pigments, as well as lutein and carotene, so it is green.

    Key Value: The economic value of the phylum Chlorella is high. Chlorella are also important in the study of plant evolution; The unicellular Chlamydomonas is thought to be similar to the ancestors of land plants, and the nutrients stored are mainly starches and oils. Among the green algae, such as Ulva, reef membrane, and moss, it has always been an edible seaweed widely harvested by coastal people.

    Single-celled green algae such as marine flat algae and chlorella multiply quickly, have high yield, contain a certain amount of protein, sugar, amino acids and a variety of vitamins, and can be used as food, feed or extract protein, fat, chlorophyll and riboflavin and other products. Some green algae can be used as medicine, such as chlorella, Ulva pora, etc. In addition, the algae-fungus symbiosis system and the method of active algae are used to treat domestic sewage and industrial wastewater.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    Chlorella is eukaryotic.

    There are many types of algae, including cyanobacteria (including Candida, trembling banana, spirulina, hair cabbage, etc.), brown algae (including kelp, wakame, etc.), green algae (including chlamydomonas, water brocade, chlorella, etc.).Among them, cyanobacteria are prokaryotes, and other algae (green algae) are eukaryotes.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Not prokaryotes, chlorella and chlamydomonas belong to unicellular algae and belong to plants, so they are eukaryotes.

    The fundamental difference between eukaryotes and prokaryotes is that the former has a nucleus bounded by a nuclear membrane in the cell, hence the eukaryotic name for this type of cell. Many eukaryotic cells also contain other organelles such as mitochondria, chloroplasts, Golgi apparatus, etc.

    Compared to prokaryotes, eukaryotes have a nucleus, and the cell size is relatively large and the growth rate is fast. Eukaryotes are usually heterotrophic microorganisms, which can derive a variety of organic acids in the process of growth and reproduction, and are easy to form complexes with metal ions in the leaching process, which is conducive to the leaching of valuable metals.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    No, both are unicellular algae and belong to plants, so they are eukaryotes.

    Unicellular algae refers to the embryoless, autotrophic, spores to reproduce the lower plants, the algae are single-celled, swarm or multicellular, the tiny ones can only be seen by a microscope, and the large ones such as sargassum and macroalgae can be up to a few meters to hundreds of meters.

    The internal structure begins to differentiate on the cells without having true roots, stems, and leaves. The whole algae is a simple phyllophyll containing chlorophyll that can carry out photosynthesis. The reproduction of algae is basically the germination of new individuals by single-celled spores or zygotes leaving the mother's body, either directly or after a short period of dormancy.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    Of course not, these are single-celled eukaryotes.

    In secondary school textbooks, only cyanobacteria are prokaryotes.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    Chlorella, chlorella are algae of the phylum Chlorophyta and are eukaryotes.

    Tremor algae are algae of the phylum Cyanobacteria and are prokaryotes.

  8. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    Chlorella, chlorella are algae of the phylum Chlorophyta and are eukaryotes.

    Tremor algae are algae of the phylum Cyanobacteria and are prokaryotes.

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    The genetic material of eukaryotes is all in the nucleus, and the nucleus is surrounded by a nuclear void membrane, which belongs to humans, animals, plants and some algae, such as chlorella. Eukaryotic algae, which additionally contain chloroplasts.

    Photosynthesis can be performed and it contains a high concentration of chlorophyll. And it is very densely packed, which can use light for photosynthesis with high efficiency.

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12 answers2024-03-27

It's a living thing. Here's why:

Chlorella is a spherical single-celled freshwater algae with a diameter of 3 8 microns, one of the earliest life on the earth, which appeared more than 2 billion years ago, and is an efficient photosynthetic plant, which grows and reproduces with photosynthetic autotrophic growth and is widely distributed. >>>More