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Algae: Natural Science

Algae

What are Algae?

Algae are photosynthetic organisms that occur in most habitats, ranging from marine and freshwater to desert sands and from hot boiling springs to snow and ice. They vary from small, single-celled forms to complex multicellular forms, such as the giant kelps of the eastern Pacific that grow to more than 60 meters in length and form dense marine forests. Algae are found in the fossil record dating back to approximately 3 billion years in the Precambrian. They exhibit a wide range of reproductive strategies, from simple, asexual cell division to complex forms of sexual reproduction.

Algae are important as primary producers of organic matter at the base of the food chain. They also provide oxygen for other aquatic life. Algae may contribute to mass mortality of other organisms, in cases of algal blooms, but they also contribute to economic well-being in the form of food, medicine and other products. In tropical regions, coralline algae can be as important as corals in the formation of reefs. Continue reading from Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History

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Books about Plants

Plants are a kingdom of life forms that includes familiar organisms such as trees, herbs, bushes, grasses, vines, ferns and mosses. Through photosynthesis, they convert water and carbon dioxide into the oxygen we breathe and the sugars that provide the primary fuel for life. Through nitrogen fixation, plants generate proteins that are basic building blocks of life. Early fossil records of photosynthesizing organisms date from about 3 billion years ago. Continue reading from The Center for Biological Diversity

Catalog Link: Seaweeds of Long Island Sound by Margaret Stewart Van Patten
Catalog Link: Slime by Ruth Kassinger
Catalog Link: Ocean Greens by Lisette Kreischer
Catalog Link: The Seaweed Book by Rose Treat
Link to Held by the Land by Leigh Joseph in the catalog
Link to Planta Sapiens by Paco Calvo in the catalog