Structure and Life Cycle of Chlamydomonas

It is unicellular green algae found in the standing water of ponds, pools, and ditches. Each cell is biflagellate spherical in shape. The cell wall is thin anterior end of the Chlamydomonas is papillate. At the anterior end at the right angles of the flagella are two contractile vacuoles. They help in the excretion and respiration of the plant. Towards this end on one lateral side is an eye spot or stigma which is reddish or brownish-red in color due to a pigment harmatochrone. This eye spot is sensitive to light. Each cell has a basin-shaped or cup-shaped chloroplast on posterior regions. There is a single pyrenoid towards the base of the chloroplast. Starch is formed around the pyrenoid. The nucleus lies in the center of the cell.

In nutrition cells of chlamydomonas are autotrophic due to the presence of chloroplasts water and inorganic salts are absorbed over the whole surface of the cell.

REPRODUCTION:

It takes place either by the asexual or sexual method.

(1) Asexual reproduction

(i) by Zoospore formation: This type of reproduction occurs in favorable conditions. Active cells of the organism come to rest, the flagella are withdrawn, and the cell contents divide into four, eight, or sixteen parts, which become zoospore. These daughter individuals develop their individual cell walls and flagella. The parent cell wall is lost and the new individuals attain independent existence. They grow and develop into new chlamydomonas.

(ii) Palmella stage: Under favourable conditions the pond becomes dry. Zoospores remain enclosed within the parent cell wall, it grows in size and divides and a large number of zoospores without flagella may be found in clusters inside an envelope of mucilage. This aggregation of cells is called the palmella stage. On the approach of favorable condition cell change to motile condition.

(2) Sexual Reproduction:
It takes place through fusion of gametes and is isogamous. Inchlamydomonas sexual reproduction is variable from isogamy to anisogamy and oogamy. Some species are monoecious and others are dioecious.
In clamydomonas media and C debaryana the sexual reproduction is isogamous. In this case contents of cell divide to form 2 to 64 biflagellate gametes (like zoospores). Gametes may be naked or may have a cell wall. These are identical in shape and size and are called isogametes. They unite in pairs from their anterior end and form quadric-flagellate zygospore. It then loses cilia and becomes rounded.
In chlamydomonas braumi sexual reproduction is of amisogamous type. One cell divides twice to form four big biflagellate gametes (female gametes) and other cells divide 3 to 4 times to form 8 or 16 small biflagellate gametes (male gametes). In this way gametes of different sizes are formed one big and one small gamete unit together which result in the formation of zygospore.

In chlamydomonas coccifera and Coogamum the sexual reproduction is of oogamous type. In male cell produces 16 or 32 small biflagellate male gametes and the female are produced singly non-motile female gamete. Male and female gamete fuse together to form a zygote.
Germination of Zygote: The zoospore of the zygote is formed by the fusion of gametes. When favorable conditions come, the zygote nucleus which is diploid (2n) divides by meiotic (reduction) division and then divides mitotically to form four zoospores which are biflagellate and contain haploid nucleus. They come out by the burting of zygote wall and develop into new individuals.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

What is the Dynamic Theory of Profit

Compare the anatomy of Bifacial and Isobilateral leaves

osmoregulation in terrestrial and aquatic animals