Lead tolerance and bioremoval by four strains of green algae from Nigerian fish ponds

2021 ◽  
Vol 58 ◽  
pp. 102403
Author(s):  
Olufunke O. Oyebamiji ◽  
Alina A. Corcoran ◽  
Edauri Navarro Pérez ◽  
Matthew O. Ilori ◽  
Olukayode O. Amund ◽  
...  
1997 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 767-774 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin K. Schrader ◽  
Marjan Q. De Regt ◽  
Craig S. Tucker ◽  
Stephen O. Duke

Cyanobacteria (blue-green algae) are undesirable in ponds used to raise fish for human food. Management of cyanobacterial communities in aquaculture ponds has been hindered by the small number of herbicides approved for use in food-fish ponds and by the lack of selectivity toward cyanobacteria for those herbicides that are approved for that use. To facilitate development of additional management options, a rapid bioassay utilizing 96-well cell culture plates was developed for screening herbicides and other phytotoxins for selective toxicity toward cyanobacteria.Oscillatoriacf.chalybeaandSelenastrum capricornutumwere chosen as representatives of cyanobacteria (Cyanophyta) and green algae (Chlorophyta), respectively. In the bioassay, wells of the cell culture plates were inoculated with cyanobacterial or unialgal culture. One of five herbicides (atrazine, diuron, endothall, fluridone, or paraquat) was then added to the wells at various concentrations, and absorbance (650 nm) was measured at 24-h intervals. Growth of treated cultures relative to untreated cultures was used to determine relative toxicity of the herbicide to the two organisms. Paraquat was the most selective of the herbicides tested and was over 10-fold more toxic toO.cf.chalybeathan toS. capricornutum. This method was demonstrated to be a rapid, effective, and highly reproducible bioassay to identify selective algicides.


Author(s):  
L. V. Leak

Electron microscopic observations of freeze-fracture replicas of Anabaena cells obtained by the procedures described by Bullivant and Ames (J. Cell Biol., 1966) indicate that the frozen cells are fractured in many different planes. This fracturing or cleaving along various planes allows one to gain a three dimensional relation of the cellular components as a result of such a manipulation. When replicas that are obtained by the freeze-fracture method are observed in the electron microscope, cross fractures of the cell wall and membranes that comprise the photosynthetic lamellae are apparent as demonstrated in Figures 1 & 2.A large portion of the Anabaena cell is composed of undulating layers of cytoplasm that are bounded by unit membranes that comprise the photosynthetic membranes. The adjoining layers of cytoplasm are closely apposed to each other to form the photosynthetic lamellae. Occassionally the adjacent layers of cytoplasm are separated by an interspace that may vary in widths of up to several 100 mu to form intralamellar vesicles.


Author(s):  
A. E. Hotchkiss ◽  
A. T. Hotchkiss ◽  
R. P. Apkarian

Multicellular green algae may be an ancestral form of the vascular plants. These algae exhibit cell wall structure, chlorophyll pigmentation, and physiological processes similar to those of higher plants. The presence of a vascular system which provides water, minerals, and nutrients to remote tissues in higher plants was believed unnecessary for the algae. Among the green algae, the Chaetophorales are complex highly branched forms that might require some means of nutrient transport. The Chaetophorales do possess apical meristematic groups of cells that have growth orientations suggestive of stem and root positions. Branches of Chaetophora incressata were examined by the scanning electron microscope (SEM) for ultrastructural evidence of pro-vascular transport.


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