-
Lillebælt ved Nørreskoven på Als. Danmark
-
Fornæs, Djursland, Danmark
-
Dokkedal, Himmerland, Danmark
-
Fornæs
-
Sardinia
-
Limfjorden Ertebølle
-
Hjerritsdal ved Mariager Fjord, Danmark
-
Mushroom Observer Image 30594: Achlya ambisexualis Raper
-
Mushroom Observer Image 30800: Phytophthora infestans Mont. de Bary
-
Terpsinoe americana by Lisa M. Weimer (USGS)Found in Chesapeake Bay Diatoms by Lisa M. Weimer, an online USGS publication located at http://pubs.usgs.gov/pdf/of/of99-45/diatom.pdfPlate 2Terpsinoe americana (Bail.) Rolfs, PTMC 3-P-2 422-424 cm., x 2000.
-
Drift of Fucus and Other Algae. [This resembles at first glance bed of growing kelp.]
-
Laminaire (L. saccharina).
-
Eudesme. Fronde composee de filaments, dresses, et tres ramafies, gelatineux, comprimes, ramules dressees a angles aigus
-
Holdfase of a large Nereocystis plant clinging to a rock.. (Collected near Low Cape, Kodiak Island)
-
Desmarestia aculeata.
-
Spatoglossum schraederi (a and b); Dictyota dichotoma (c and d), narrow form from coral reef.
-
Pheophycees (Algues brunes) Enceliacees, Punctaria latifolia. Grev..
-
Halidrys osmunda.
-
Padina gymnospora is not the primary subject of the video clip; the primary subject is Pomacentrus coelestis (Neon damsel). Indo-Pacific, Duration 64 seconds
-
On the left a Licmophora cell is visible in lateral (valvar) view, on the right we look at the girdle band (cingulim) of the cell, so this is called cingular view. Collected from Bodden, the brackish waters lying between the isles of Hiddensee and Ruegen (German Baltic Sea). This image was taken using Zeiss Universal with Olympus C7070 CCD camera.
-
Marginal silica processes are visible. Scale bar indicates 25 µm. The image was built up using several photomicrographic frames with manual stacking technique. Sample from North Sea near Heligoland (spring diatom bloom). Images were taken using Zeiss Universal with Olympus C7070 CCD camera.
-
Botrydium (bot-rid-ee-um), xanthophyte - a group of walled stramenopiles although unlike most stramenopiles with plastids, the xanthophytes have a much greener colour. Botrydium is usually assigned to the Vaucheriales, which are characterised by being able to adopt a coenocytic (multinucleate) body form. Normally grows on mud. Phase contrast.
-
Closeup of Porosira glacialis chain. Note that the delicate spines are chitinous. Focus on cell center showing cytoplasmic accumulation around the nucleus. Scale bar indicates 50 µm. The image was built up using several photomicrographic frames with manual stacking technique. Sample from North Sea near Heligoland (spring diatom bloom). Images were taken using Zeiss Universal with Olympus C7070 CCD camera.
-
Material from the Netherlands.