- Dunaliella
-
Dunaliella Dunaliella salina Teodor. A: Vegetative cell, B: Zoospores in cell division, C: Mating gametes, D: Ripe zygospore, E: Zygospore germination Scientific classification Domain: Eukaryota Kingdom: Viridiplantae Phylum: Chlorophyta Class: Chlorophyceae Order: Chlamydomonadales Family: Dunaliellaceae Genus: Dunaliella Species - D. acidophila
- D. bardawil
- D. bioculata
- D. lateralis
- D. maritima
- D. minuta
- D. parva
- D. peircei
- D. polymorpha
- D. primolecta
- D. pseudosalina
- D. quartolecta
- D. salina Teodor.
- D. sp. 006
- D. sp. 336
- D. sp. BSF1
- D. sp. BSF2
- D. sp. BSF3
- D. sp. CCMP 1641
- D. sp. CCMP 1923
- D. sp. CCMP 220
- D. sp. CCMP 367
- D. sp. FL1
- D. sp. hd10
- D. sp. SAG19.6
- D. sp. SPMO 109-1
- D. sp. SPMO 112-1
- D. sp. SPMO 112-2
- D. sp. SPMO 112-3
- D. sp. SPMO 112-4
- D. sp. SPMO 128-2
- D. sp. SPMO 200-2
- D. sp. SPMO 200-3
- D. sp. SPMO 200-8
- D. sp. SPMO 201-2
- D. sp. SPMO 201-3
- D. sp. SPMO 201-4
- D. sp. SPMO 201-5
- D. sp. SPMO 201-6
- D. sp. SPMO 201-8
- D. sp. SPMO 202-4
- D. sp. SPMO 207-3
- D. sp. SPMO 210-3
- D. sp. SPMO 211-2
- D. sp. SPMO 300-4
- D. sp. SPMO 300-5
- D. sp. SPMO 600-1
- D. sp. SPMO 601-1
- D. sp. SPMO 980625-1E
- D. sp. SPMO 980625-IE
- D. sp. SPMO BP3
- D. tertiolecta
- D. viridis
- uncultured Dunaliella sp.
Dunaliella is a genus of algae, specifically of the Dunaliellaceae.[1]
Dunaliella sp. are motile, unicellular, rod to ovoid shaped (9 - 11 µm) green algae (Chlorophyceae), which are common in marine waters.
The organisms are relatively simple to cultivate and do not clump or form chains.
A new species of Dunaliella was discovered in the Atacama desert in 2010. It is believed that the algae is sustained by the condensation of water vapour on hanging spider-webs. [2]
The best-known species is the halophile Dunaliella salina Teodor.
Contents
Dunaliella tertiolecta
Dunaliella tertiolecta, is a marine green flagellate with a cell size of 10 – 12 µm.[3]
This strain is reported to have oil yield of about 37% (organic basis). D. tertiolecta is a fast growing strain and that means it has a high CO2 sequestration rate as well.[4][5]
See also
- Algal dry mass
- Algal fuel
- Photobioreactor
- Phytochelatin
References
- ^ See the NCBI webpage on Dunaliella. Data extracted from the "NCBI taxonomy resources". National Center for Biotechnology Information. ftp://ftp.ncbi.nih.gov/pub/taxonomy/. Retrieved 2007-03-19.
- ^ http://www.ouramazingplanet.com/extreme-microbe-drinks-dew-on-spiderwebs-to-live-0550/
- ^ http://www.tasmaniatogether.tas.gov.au/schools/tasmania_together_youth_challenge/youthChallenge/Y9-10/Storm_Holwill_Just_a_drop_in_the_ocean.pdf
- ^ http://www.algaefuels.org/algae_FAQ.htm (website no longer exists)
- ^ http://www.unapcaem.org/publication/bioenergy.pdf
Further reading
- Nozaki H, Onishi K, Morita E (2002). "Differences in pyrenoid morphology are correlated with differences in the rbcL genes of members of the Chloromonas lineage (Volvocales, Chlorophyceae)". J Mol Evol. 55 (4): 414–430. doi:10.1007/s00239-002-2338-9. PMID 12355262.
External links
Scientific references
- PubMed references for Dunaliella
- PubMed Central references for Dunaliella
- Google Scholar references for Dunaliella
Scientific databases
Duniella tertiolecta
- Dunaliella tertiolecta, cell at 400x in the Dunaliella Culture Collection at Brooklyn College.
- Specification.
- Photosynthetic function in D. tertiolecta (chlorophyta), during a nitrogen starvation and recovery cycle.
- Ultrastructure of Dunaliella tertiolecta Cells Grown under Low and High CO2 Concentrations.
- In vitro inhibition of the replication of haemorrhagic septicaemia virus (VHSV) and African swine fever virus (ASFV) by extracts from marine microalgae Dunaliella tertiolecta].
- NCBI taxonomy page for Dunaliella
- Search Tree of Life taxonomy pages for Dunaliella
- Search Species2000 page for Dunaliella
Categories:- Green algae
- Chlorophyceae stubs
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