cyanobacteria

Biology

(noun)

photosynthetic prokaryotic microorganisms, of phylum Cyanobacteria, once known as blue-green algae

Related Terms

  • endomembrane
  • endosymbiont
  • peroxisome
  • aerobic
Microbiology

(noun)

Cyanobacteria, also known as blue-green bacteria, blue-green algae, and Cyanophyta, is a phylum of bacteria that obtain their energy through photosynthesis.

Related Terms

  • oxygenic
  • photosynthesis
  • heterocyst

Examples of cyanobacteria in the following topics:

  • Cyanobacteria

    • Cyanobacteria can be found in almost every terrestrial and aquatic habitat .
    • Cyanobacteria include unicellular and colonial species.
    • In water columns some cyanobacteria float by forming gas vesicles, like in archaea.
    • Some cyanobacteria produce toxins, called cyanotoxins.
    • Cyanobacteria cultured in specific media.
  • Oxygenic Photosynthesis

    • In plants, algae and cyanobacteria, photosynthesis releases oxygen .
    • Although there are some differences between oxygenic photosynthesis in plants, algae, and cyanobacteria, the overall process is quite similar in these organisms.
    • In plants, algae and cyanobacteria, photosynthesis releases oxygen.
    • Although there are some differences between oxygenic photosynthesis in plants, algae, and cyanobacteria, the overall process is quite similar in these organisms.
  • Edible Algae

    • They inherited their photosynthetic apparatus from cyanobacteria.
    • Cyanobacteria are sometimes called blue-green algae but they are prokaryotic organisms and are not true algae.
    • Cultivated microalgae and cyanobacteria such as Spirulina and Chlorella are sold as nutritional supplements.
  • Carboxysomes

    • Carboxysomes are intracellular structures found in many autotrophic bacteria, including Cyanobacteria, Knallgasbacteria, Nitroso- and Nitrobacteria.
    • These organelles are found in all cyanobacteria and many chemotrophic bacteria that fix carbon dioxide.
    • In the early 1960s, similar polyhedral objects were observed in other cyanobacteria.
  • The Evolution of Plastids

    • Plastids may derive from cyanobacteria engulfed via endosymbiosis by early eukaryotes, giving cells the ability to conduct photosynthesis.
    • Like mitochondria, plastids appear to have a primary endosymbiotic origin, but differ in that they derive from cyanobacteria rather than alpha-proteobacteria.
    • Cyanobacteria are a group of photosynthetic bacteria with all the conventional structures of prokaryotes.
    • In addition to thylakoids, chloroplasts found in eukaryotes have a circular DNA chromosome and ribosomes similar to those of cyanobacteria.
    • (a) Red algae and (b) green algae (visualized by light microscopy) share similar DNA sequences with photosynthetic cyanobacteria.
  • The Purpose and Process of Photosynthesis

    • Plants, algae, and a group of bacteria called cyanobacteria are the only organisms capable of performing photosynthesis.
    • Photoautotrophs, including (a) plants, (b) algae, and (c) cyanobacteria, synthesize their organic compounds via photosynthesis using sunlight as an energy source.
    • Cyanobacteria and planktonic algae can grow over enormous areas in water, at times completely covering the surface.
  • Endosymbiosis and the Evolution of Eukaryotes

    • Mereschkowski was familiar with work by botanist Andreas Schimper, who had observed in 1883 that the division of chloroplasts in green plants closely resembled that of free-living cyanobacteria.
    • More detailed electron microscopic comparisons between cyanobacteria and chloroplasts combined with the discovery that plastids (organelles associated with photosynthesis) and mitochondria contain their own DNA led to a resurrection of the idea in the 1960s.
    • These cyanobacteria have become chloroplasts in modern plant cells.
  • Prochlorophytes

    • These organisms lack red and blue Phycobilin pigments and have staked thylakoids, both of which make them different from Cyanophyta (Cyanobacteria).
    • They morphologically resemble Cyanobacteria, formally known as Blue Green Algae.
  • The Energetics of Chemolithotrophy

    • An example of this is chemolithotrophic bacteria in deep sea worms or plastids, which are organelles within plant cells that may have evolved from photolithotrophic cyanobacteria-like organisms.
    • An example of this is chemolithotrophic bacteria in deep sea worms or plastids, which are organelles within plant cells that may have evolved from photolithotrophic cyanobacteria-like organisms .
  • The Nitrogen Cycle

    • Cyanobacteria live in most aquatic ecosystems where sunlight is present; they play a key role in nitrogen fixation.
    • Cyanobacteria are able to use inorganic sources of nitrogen to "fix" nitrogen.
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