blue-green algae:
cyanobacteria; members of the
kingdom Monera that are photosynthetic and are found in the soil and in freshwater or saltwater
environments.
Full article >>>blue-green algae Prokaryote organisms with photosynthetic phycobilin
pigments.
blue
tongue Virus disease of
ruminants
transmitted by biting midges (Ceratopogonidae).
Full article >>>Nostoc a
blue-green algae.
nostril(nares) An external opening of the nose leading into the
nasal cavity.
Full article >>>Cyanobacteria (
blue-green algae)
Unlike other photosynthetic
bacteria,
cyanobacteria ...
Full article >>>An
organism whose
cells possess a
nucleus and other membrane-bound
vesicles, including all members of the
protist,
fungi,
plant and
animal kingdoms; and excluding
viruses,
bacteria, and
blue-green algae. See
Prokaryote.
Evolution.
Full article >>>Bacteria (technically the
Eubacteria) and blue-green
bacteria (the
blue-green algae when I was a student), or
cyanobacteria are the major forms of life in this
kingdom.
Full article >>>One of the most popular microalgal
species is Spirulina (Arthrospira platensis), which is a
Cyanobacteria (known as
blue-green algae), and has been hailed by some as a superfood.
Full article >>>Traditionally the
cyanobacteria have been included among the
algae, referred to as the cyanophytes or
Blue-green Algae, though some recent treatises on
algae specifically exclude them.
Full article >>>:
Unicellular, photosynthetic (photo-
autotroph
)
prokaryote (in the
Kingdom Monera).
Formerly known as
blue-green algae.
It contains
chlorophyll a
but not
chloroplast. They reproduce by fission and never
sexually.
Full article >>>Photosynthetic,
oxygen-producing
bacteria (formerly know as
blue-green algae).
cyclic AMP ...
Full article >>>Cell or
organism with membrane-bound, structurally discrete
nucleus and other well-developed subcellular compartments.
Eukaryotes include all
organisms except
viruses,
bacteria, and
blue-green algae. Compare
prokaryote. See
chromosomes.
Gene mapping ...
Full article >>>Castenholz, R. W. 1992.
Species usage, concept, and
evolution in the
cyanobacteria (
blue-green algae). Journal of
Phycology 28:737-745.
Full article >>>'"/>