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Ochrophyte

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Description

Ochrophytes, also called heterokontophytes or stramenochromes, are a group of algae. They are a special kind of eukaryotes, which means they have a cell nucleus. These algae have two different-sized flagella, and one of them has special hairs called mastigonemes.

Photosynthesis

What makes ochrophytes unique are their photosynthetic organelles or plastids. These are wrapped in four membranes and have parts called thylakoids stacked in groups of three. They use chlorophyll a and c for capturing energy from sunlight, along with other colors like Ξ²-carotene and xanthophylls.

Types

Ochrophytes are very diverse and include important algae like brown algae and diatoms. They can be called the phylum Ochrophyta, Heterokontophyta, or they are sometimes grouped as a subphylum called Ochrophytina within the phylum Gyrista. Their plastids originally came from red algal ancestors.

Etymology

Scientists have used many names to describe a group of green and yellow algae. The most common name today is Ochrophyta, named after a golden alga called Ochromonas. This name was made by a scientist named Thomas Cavalier-Smith in 1986. He later changed the name a little, but most scientists still use Ochrophyta.

Another name used by algae experts is Heterokontophyta. This name comes from old Greek words meaning "different pole" and was first used in 1899. It refers to the moving parts, called flagella, that these algae have. Over time, this name was used for more types of algae.

Characteristics

Ochrophytes are tiny living things made of cells. These cells can be simple or grouped together in many ways. Some brown algae grow big and have many parts. All ochrophytes have special parts called mitochondria that help them make energy.

Ochrophytes are special because they have tiny hair-like parts called flagella and green parts called chloroplasts. These help them make food from sunlight. Their chloroplasts have four layers and special green colors that help them catch sunlight.

Diversity

Dinobryon (Chrysophyceae)

Ochrophytes are a large group of algae with many different types. They have many species, and most are diatoms. They are divided into several groups, or classes, including:

Lyrella (Diatomeae)
Pelvetiopsis (Phaeophyceae)

Reproduction

Ochrophytes can make new plants without parents. They can do this by breaking apart, creating small pieces, dividing cells, or making spores. They can also make new plants with parents by making special cells called gametes. They do this in three ways: having cells that look the same, having cells that look different in size, or having one large cell and one small cell.

Ecology

Ochrophytes live almost everywhere, from the ocean to rivers and soil. Some types are mostly found in the sea, like brown algae and golden algae, while others are more common in freshwater or soil. Diatoms, a type of ochrophyte, are very common in the ocean.

Some ochrophytes can live in both water and by eating other tiny organisms. In rivers, golden algae and yellow-green algae grow attached to rocks or float freely. Diatoms in rivers have special ways to stick to surfaces so they don’t get washed away.

Some ochrophytes can harm fish. For example, certain types can produce substances that hurt fish or have sharp parts that block fish gills. One type can make a toxin that can be harmful if eaten by people.

Evolution

External

Ochrophytes are a diverse group of organisms called Stramenopila. They include many simple, single-celled organisms. Ochrophytes came from an event where a red alga joined a cell, helping it make food from sunlight.

Scientists think ochrophytes began to evolve between 874 and 543 million years ago. Early fossils, like ones from a type called xanthophyte that are about a billion years old, show ochrophytes were already around by 1000 million years ago. Other early examples include types that lived between 750 and 550 million years ago.

Internal

The relationships between different ochrophytes are still being studied. Three main groups are commonly accepted. One group includes brown algae, which became very diverse around 310 million years ago. Other groups include golden algae and diatoms, which are very small but common in water.

In 2021, scientists found a new group of algae. Some simple organisms without chloroplasts might be related to ochrophytes, suggesting their ancestors may have started to develop chloroplasts before losing them.

History of knowledge

Pre-Linnean

People have known about brown algae, like kelp and other seaweeds, for a very long time. Records of these plants go back to early China (around 3000 BC), Japan (around 500 BC), and Greece (300 BC, such as Theophrastus). They were probably used for food, dyes, and medicine long before we had written records. Brown algae might have even helped people travel along coastlines, especially from East Asia to the Americas. Other tiny algae were not written about because they are too small to see without a microscope.

In the late 1600s, Antony van Leeuwenhoek was the first to see tiny living things, but he did not see these small algae. The first clear pictures of diatoms, a type of algae, were made in England in 1703.

Discovery period (1753–1882)

The first official description of these algae was made by Carl Linnaeus in 1753 for a brown alga called Fucus. Over the next years, scientists began describing single-celled chrysophytes and diatoms for the first time. During this time, scientists thought brown algae were plants, while tiny algae were animals, calling them infusoria. Other types of algae, like xanthophytes, were first described in 1801, and raphidophytes were found in 1865.

Important books were written during this time, like one in 1813 by Jean Vincent FΓ©lix Lamouroux, who used color to sort algae. A big step happened in 1838 when Christian Gottfried Ehrenberg wrote about many of these algae after looking at them with a microscope.

First synthesis period (1882–1914)

In 1882, a scientist named M.J. Rostafinski suggested that diatoms, golden algae, and brown algae might be related. Other scientists like Carl Correns, Georg Klebs, and Ernst Lemmermann added to this idea. In 1900, Frederick Blackman proposed that complex plants came from simple moving algae. In 1914, Adolf Pascher wrote a summary but did not fully agree that all these algae were related.

Floristic period (1914–1950)

During this time, scientists stopped talking much about how these algae might be related because the tools they had were not good enough to show clear connections. However, they described many new species.

In the 20th century, new ways to study cells and DNA helped scientists discover many new groups of algae. The first full mapping of genes for an ochrophyte, from Thalassiosira pseudonana, began in 2002.

Images

Diagram showing the parts of an ochrophyte cell, a type of algae, including the nucleus, mitochondria, and flagella.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Ochrophyte, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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