Cryptomonas

Cryptomonas
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Chromista
Phylum: Cryptophyta
Class: Cryptophyceae
Order: Cryptomonadales
Family: Cryptomonadaceae
Genus: Cryptomonas
Ehrenberg, 1831
Type species
Cryptomonas ovata
Ehrenberg 1831
Species

See text

Synonyms
  • Campylomonas Hill 1991
  • Cryptochrysis Pascher 1911
  • Chroomonas (Cryptochrysis) (Pascher 1911) Butcher 1967
  • Cryptomonas (Caerulomonas) Butcher 1967
  • Cryptomonas (Eucryptomonas) Diesing 1850
  • Cryptomonas sect. Eucryptomonas (Diesing 1850) Massart 1901
  • Pseudocryptomonas Bicudo & Tell 1988

Cryptomonas is the name-giving genus of the Cryptomonads established by German biologist Christian Gottfried Ehrenberg in 1831. The algae are common in freshwater habitats and brackish water worldwide and often form blooms in greater depths of lakes. The cells are usually brownish or greenish in color and are characteristic of having a slit-like furrow at the anterior. They are not known to produce any toxins. They are used to feed small zooplankton, which is the food source for small fish in fish farms. Many species of Cryptomonas can only be identified by DNA sequencing. Cryptomonas can be found in several marine ecosystems in Australia and South Korea.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.