Biology, asked by darnellford79, 9 months ago

How are algae different from plants?


Answers

Answered by annie1230
10

Explanation:

Algae and plants are similar in that they can produce their own food from nutrients and sunlight by photosynthesis. The main difference between the two is in their complexity. Algae are simple organisms, sometimes unicellular, and even the largest types are relatively simple in structure.

Answered by kingofself
3

They are decomposers and doesn’t acquire chlorophyll and can't able to make their own food.

Explanation:

  • Algae can each of two be "unicellular" and "multi-cellular" while plants are "multi-cellular organisms".
  • Algae mostly survive underwater while plants arrived on land.
  • They don't have makeup such as connective tissues, leaves, stems and roots unlike plants.
  • The anatomical make-up of cells from green algae and plants contribution to correspondence in terms of their materials and the various types of cell movement that taken place.
  • The covering layer of walls on both cell types holds 20 to 25 percent cellulose.

To know more:

How does algae differ from other plants.

https://brainly.in/question/5053792

How do algae differ from fungi

https://brainly.in/question/4556482

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