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Phylum Chlorophyta (Green Algae)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 January 2024

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Summary

The green algae or chlorophytes are the most species-rich and morphologically diverse group in the Flora. Traditionally they have been classified into classes and orders according to the level of organization when in the vegetative state. As a consequence, motile forms are traditionally attributed to the order Volocales, coccoids to the Chlorococcales, filamentous forms to the Ulotrichales and Chaetophorales. A new classification was proposed by Mattox and Stewart (1984) based on the ultrastructural architecture of the basal body in flagellated cells and on cytokinesis during mitosis. Species with the basal bodies orientated in a clockwise (CW) or directly opposite (DO) were placed in class Chlorophyceae and those having a counterclockwise orientation in the classes Ulvophyceae and Pleurastrophyceae; the latter was renamed Trebouxiophyceae by Friedl (1995), who redefined it. Another class, the Charophyceae, was recognized by Mattox and Stewart (1984), who distinguished it from the other classes by the presence of a cell plate (phragmoplast) produced during cytokinesis and the subapical insertion of two similar flagella; the multilayered structure at the flagellar base originally used for separation is known now to be present in other classes.

Molecular data have shown that the green algae are separated in two major evolutionary lineages, the Chlorophyta and the Streptophyta. The Chlorophyceae, Trebouxiophyceae and Ulvophyceae belong to the Chlorophyta. The Streptophyta include the land plants and several groups of green algae; whereas in the past these were regarded as orders of the class Charophyceae, at present they are separated at class level: Mesostigmatophyceae, Chlorokybophyceae, Klebsormidiophyceae, Coleochaetophyceae, Zygnemophyceae and Charophyceae (Lewis and McCourt, 2004; Lemieux et al., 2007; Pröschold and Leliaert, 2007; Becker and Marin, 2009). In the Zygnemophyceae, the traditionally recognized order Zygnematales is often divided into the Zygnematales sensu stricto and the Desmidiales (see McCourt et al., 2000; Gontcharov et al., 2003). The classification of the green algae based upon ultrastructural details has received further support from the phylogenetic analysis of nuclear-encoded SSU and ITS rDNA sequences (Pröschold and Leliaert, 2007).

Key to Genera

The key below is divided into sections designed to facilitate the ready identification of the more than 250 chlorophyte genera recorded from the British Isles. The first step is to decide to which section your sample belongs and then to key it out under the appropriate section. Once having arrived at a genus, then compare it against the description and illustrations before using the key to species.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Freshwater Algal Flora of the British Isles
An Identification Guide to Freshwater and Terrestrial Algae
, pp. 364 - 765
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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