1 / 34

Ch 6 seaweeds

Ch 6 seaweeds. Primary producers Autotrophs Macrophytes Macroalgae. General Structure page 103. Thallus - complete body Blades-leaf like portions of thallus . Large SA for photosynthesis Pneumatocytes -gas filled bladders keeping blades close to the surface for photosynthesis

Download Presentation

Ch 6 seaweeds

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ch 6 seaweeds

  2. Primary producers • Autotrophs • Macrophytes • Macroalgae

  3. General Structure page 103 • Thallus- complete body • Blades-leaf like portions of thallus. Large SA for photosynthesis • Pneumatocytes-gas filled bladders keeping blades close to the surface for photosynthesis • Stipe-stem-like structure for support • Holdfast-root like structures for attachment

  4. Seaweeds lack true leaves, stems, and roots

  5. General structure

  6. Types of seaweed • Green algae • Brown algae • Red algae • Requires chemical analysis to distinguish pigments • KINGDOM PROTISTA, NOT PLANTAE

  7. Facts about seaweed • http://www.seaweed.ie/

  8. Algae are plant-like microorganisms that preceded plants in developing photosynthesis, the ability to turn sunlight into energy. Algae cells contain light-absorbing chloroplasts and produce oxygen through photosynthesis.

  9. Although plants generally get the credit for producing the oxygen we breathe, some 75% or more of the oxygen in the planet’s atmosphere is actually produced by photosynthetic algae and cyanobacteria

  10. Algae also play an important role as the foundation for the aquatic food chain. All higher aquatic life forms depend either directly or indirectly on microscopic gardens of algae.

  11. Green Algae • Mostly freshwater and terrestrial • 10% of 7,000 species are marine

  12. Brown algae • The color of brown algae is due to a yellow brown pigment: fucoxanthin • Dominant primary producers on temperate and polar rocky coasts and include the largest and most complex seaweeds

  13. Brown algae- Kelp • Most complex and largest of all brown algae • Temperate and subpolar latitudes • Blades are harvested for food • Kelp bed or kelp forests page 106 • 30-80 meters in length • Can grow ½ meter per day

  14. Kelp

  15. Giant kelp forest • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U81p4cb9mwI&feature=fvwrel • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GcbU4bfkDA4&feature=related

  16. Kelp reproduction • Alternation of generations: • It is a type of life cycle found in some algae, fungi, and all plants where an organism alternates between a haploid (n) gametophyte generation and a diploid (2n) sporophyte generation

  17. All plants undergo a life cycle that takes them through both haploid and diploid generations. The multicellular diploid plant structure is called the sporophyte, which produces spores through meiotic (asexual) division. The multicellular haploid plant structure is called the gametophyte, which is formed from the spore and give rise to the haploid gametes. The fluctuation between these diploid and haploid stages that occurs in plants is called the alternation of generations

  18. Alternation of generations

  19. Products containing kelp • YOUR JOB IN YOUR JOURNAL- HOMEWORK • Alginate • Carrageenan • Beta Carotene

  20. Health Benefits of Kelp • http://www.advancedbionutritionals.com/Special-Offers/Alginol-ABALGINPPC.htm?gclid=CJ7DwePNuLMCFQvznAod-nEAJQ • http://www.healthdiaries.com/eatthis/8-health-benefits-of-kelp.html

  21. Kelp Beauty Supplies • Hair growth: • http://www.livestrong.com/article/158317-kelp-for-hair-growth-does-it-work/ • Seaweed Baths: • http://www.seaweed.ie/baths/index.php

  22. Octonauts : Kelp Forest 10:00min • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1IzdsxmCaY0

  23. Red Algae • There are more species of marine red algae than of marine green and brown algae combined • 4000 species • A photosynthetic red pigment, phycoerythrin, allows them to thrive in deep waters where sunlight is scarce.

  24. Examples of Red Algae • Coralline algae, Irish moss, gigartina are some types of red marine algae. Coralline algae is one of the main components of coral reefs.

  25. The combination of milk protein with the algal polysaccharides produce carrageenan, a common thickening agent. Modern uses include ice cream, whipped cream, chocolate milk, thick fruit syrups and many others. Pharmaceutical gels, lotions and toothpaste also benefit from carrageenan

  26. Kelp, a common name for a number or red and brown, leafy seaweeds, has been a staple food, often called nori in Asia, for thousands of years

  27. NORI chips!!!! • Nori, sesame oil, sesame seeds, garlic powder

  28. Seaweed Recipes • http://www.oceanvegetables.com/seaweed-recipes.html

  29. Economic importance • Good source of vitamins (B12), minerals, fiber, antioxidants • Biofuels

  30. What are biofuels?? • http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2007/10/biofuels/biofuels-interactive

  31. biofuel • Hopes are to derive ethanol directly from kelp • The “struggle” is finding a microbe to ferment alginate • Estimate: seaweed growing in less than 3% of waters could produce enough ethanol to replace 60 billion gallons of fossil fuels • The kelp would be cultivated not taken from the wild

  32. Seaweed: Biofuels • Ted Talk: • http://www.ted.com/talks/jonathan_trent_energy_from_floating_algae_pods.html • 14:46 • “Energy from floating algae ponds”

  33. Seagrasses, cordgrasses, mangroves • Seagrasses- Plants adapted to water. Not true grass • Cordgrasses are true members of the grass family. Land species tolerant of salt. Do not tolerate total submergence by seawater. Live in salt marshes • Mangroves- trees and shrubs adapted to live along tropical and subtropical shores

More Related