Biology, asked by s20200735, 3 months ago

differentiate between chlorophyceae and rhodophyceae​

Answers

Answered by tanishgupta886
4

Explanation:

Answer. The one difference is Chlorophyceae has the green pigments, and Rhodophyceae has the red pigments, and the Phaeophyceae do have the brown pigments. ... Rhodophyceae has the phycocyanin and phycoerythrins and the other one Phaeophyceae do have the flavoxanthin and the fucoxanthin.

Answered by deepakojha11411
9

Answer:

Chlorophyceae is a class of green algae. Most members of this class are aquatic (freshwater or marine water). They are photosynthetic plant-like organisms. They contain chlorophyll a and b.

Rhodophyceae is a class of red algae. They contain a water-soluble red colour pigment called phycoerythrin, which gives them a characteristic red colour. They also contain phycocyanin, chlorophyll a and d. Red algae are mostly marine organisms. They are multicellular thalli

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