Overview

Comprehensive Description

Description of Pandorina

Colonies ellipsoidal to spherical, mostly of 8 or 16 cells of similar size, arranged in a common gelatinous matrix; colonial boundary smooth, part of it penetrating between cells into central region of colony forming individual sheaths around cells cells mostly closely packed, flattened by mutual compression and contiguous in the centre (any intercellular connections resulting from incomplete cleavage); cells obovate or wedge-shaped or more rounded, bearing 2 equal flagella; chloroplast cup-shaped, sometimes longitudinally striated, with one to several pyrenoids; eyespot present, larger in anterior cells; nucleus central; contractile vacuoles 2, anterior; asexual reproduction by formation of 8- or 16-celled plakea which inverts to form a spheroidal daughter colony; sexual reproduction isogamous or anisogamous, heterothallic or rarely homothallic; the constitutive cells of the colony escaping from the gelatinous matrix and functioning as gametes; gametes fuse to form a 4-flagellated planozygote, motile for some time; resting zygote spherical, mostly smooth-walled (one species with spinous wall), often with reddish contents; on germination, one or two biflagellate gone cells escaping from zygote wall and dividing into a gone colony; nutrition phototrophic or photo-organotrophic; common genus in freshwater, especially in pools and ditches and often appearing in cultures from dried soil samples.
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Pandorina

Pandorina is a genus of green algae composed of 8, 16, or sometimes 32 cells, held together at their bases to form a sack globular colony surrounded by mucilage. The cells are ovoid or slightly narrowed at one end to appear keystone- or pear-shaped. Each cell has two flagella with two contractile vacuoles at their base, an eyespot, and a large cup-shaped chloroplast with at least one pyrenoid.

The colonies coordinate their flagellar movement to create a rolling, swimming motion. Pandorina shows the beginnings of the colony polarity and differentiation seen in Volvox since the anterior cells have larger eyespots. Molecular sequencing has shown that pandorina is monophyletic.

Asexual reproduction is by simultaneous division of all cells of the colony to form autocolonies that are liberated by a gelatinization of the colonial envelope. Sexual reproduction occurs by division of each cell of the colony into 16-32 zoogametes. Zoogametes show indications of heterogamy, a slight difference in the size and motility of the pairs that fuse to form the smooth walled zygote. (Smith, 1920, p. 95).[1]

References

  1. ^ a b Smith, GM. Phytoplankton of Inland Lakes of Wisconsin, Part I, Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey, Madison, WI. (1920).
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