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Cyanobacteria

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Cyanobacteria

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    1. Cyanobacteria THE FIRST ALGAE!!!!!

    3. Cyanobacteria terminology - Division Cyanophyta - Cyanobacteria formerly known as BlueGreen Algae - Cyano = blue - Bacteria acknowledges that they are more closely related to prokaryotic bacteria than eukaryotic algae

    6. Cyanobacteria Microscopic organisms Found in marine sediments and pelagic zone, freshwater lakes, soils, Live in extreme environments chemically and temperature.

    7. Importance 1) First organisms to have 2 photosystems and to produce organic material and give off O2 as a bi-product. ?Very important to the evolution of the earths oxidizing atmosphere .

    8. Importance 2) Many fix or convert atmospheric nitrogen into usable forms through Nitrogen Fixation when other forms are unavailable. IMPORTANT because atmospheric N2 is unavailable to most living organisms because breaking the triple bond is difficult

    9. Cyanobacteria Characteristics - Pigments chl a, phycobiliproteins - phycoerythrin - phycocyanin * BlueGreen Color - allophycocyanin - Storage glycogen - Cell Walls amino acids, sugars

    10. Forms Unicell with mucilaginous envelope Colonies Filaments uniserate in a single row - OR - multiserate not TRUE branching when trichomes are > 1 in rows

    11. Features Trichome row of cells

    12. Features Mucilaginous Sheath Function protects cells from drying and involved in gliding. Sheath is often colored: Red = acidic Blue = basic Yellow/Brown = high salt

    13. Features Heterocyst thick walled cell, hollow looking. Larger than vegetative cells. FUNCTION provides the anerobic environment for N fixation.

    15. Habit success due to ability tolerate a wide range of conditions Marine littoral and pelagic Fresh Water Hot Springs Terrestrial soil flora

    16. Heterocyst Larger than vegetative cells Hollow looking Thick walled doesnt allow atmospheric gas to enter. Photosynthetically inactive No CO2 fixation or O2 evolution Formation of heterocysts triggered by [molybdenum] and and low [nitrogen]

    17. Nitrogen Nitrogen is a limiting nutrient necessary for the production of amino acids = building blocks of life.

    18. Nitrogen Fixation ONLY cyanobacteria and prokaryotic bacteria can FIX nitrogen. Of these two only CYANOBACTERIA evolve OXYGEN during photosynthesis Important because nitrogenase (enzyme involved in fixing nitrogen) is INACTIVATED by O2.

    19. Mechanisms to Separate Nitrogenase from Oxygen Heterocyst (spatial) OR Fix Nitrogen in the DARK but not LIGHT found in non-heterocystic cyanobacteria (temporal)

    20. AEROBIC CO2 + H2O -----------? CH2O (sugar) +O2 Electrons for PS1 come from PS2 which evolves oxygen (splitting of water)

    21. ANAEROBIC in the presence of sulfer 2H2S + CO2 --------? CH2O +2S + H2O H2S is the electron donor so the reaction does not produce oxygen.

    22. Advantage for Cyanobacteria Can live in fluctuating environments of aerobic and anaerobic with light present.

    23. Cyanotoxins in Cyanobacteria Neurotoxins block neuron transmission in muscles (Anabaena, Oscillatoria) Hepatotoxins inhibit protein phosphatase, cause liver bleeding. Found in drinking water. (Anabaena, Oscillatoria, Nostoc) Eg. swimmers itch - Lygnbia

    24. Movement No flagellae or structures to enhance movement Excrete mucilage jet propulsion, gliding Helix fibers send waves of contraction

    28. Asexual Reproduction - Hormogonia formation - - Endospore / Akinete formation - Fragmentation Exospore

    29. Asexual Reproduction Hormogonia short piece of trichome found in filaments. It detaches from parent filament and glides away

    32. Asexual Reproduction Akinete thick walled resting spore

    34. Asexual Reproduction Akinete thick walled resting spore Function resistant to unfavorable environmental conditions. Appear as larger cells in the chain and different than heterocyst. Generally lose buoyancy

    35. Asexual Reproduction Fragmentation - fragmentation

    36. Oldest Fossils 3.5by old carbonaceous microfossils S.Africa 3.4by old filaments and microbial fossils W. Australia 3.4 by old stromatolites S.Africa, Australia

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