| Phacotus | |
|---|---|
| | |
| Phacotus crassus | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Clade: | Viridiplantae |
| Division: | Chlorophyta |
| Class: | Chlorophyceae |
| Order: | Chlamydomonadales |
| Family: | Phacotaceae |
| Genus: | Phacotus Perty |
| Type species | |
| Phacotus lenticularis (Ehrenberg) Diesing | |
| Species | |
Phacotus is a genus of green algae in the family Phacotaceae. [1] It is found in freshwater, and can be plentiful in temperate hardwater lakes. [2]
Phacotus is a single-celled, uninucleate, motile organism in which the protoplast is contained with a rigid shell, termed a lorica. [3] The lorica is strongly compressed, colorless to brownish, and consists of two equal parts attached together. The lorica may be smooth, slightly rough or ornamented. The lorica is made of a mixture of carbohydrates, proteins, sulfates, and various minerals including calcite. Under cross-polarized light, the lorica displays two slightly different appearances; one of these may occasionally feature a red ring near the perimeter. [2] This difference could represent the outer and inner views of the loricae, as they typically separate after the organism's death. [2]
The protoplast is slightly smaller than the lorica. The chloroplast is cup-shaped, parietal, with an anterior stigma and a pyrenoid. The two flagella emerge from a single opening or two openings within the lorica. Two contractile vacuoles are present at the base of the flagella. [3]
Asexual reproduction occurs via the formation of two, four, eight or 16 zoospores. The zoospores develop within a gelatinous sporangium, which expands after the two shells of the lorica separate. Sexual reproduction has been reported and is isogamous, but rare. [4]