Biology, asked by aryan7256, 11 months ago

Two unequal lateral flagella present in

Answers

Answered by sanyam75
2

Answer:

chlamydomonas from thallophyta

Answered by anjaliom1122
0

Answer:

Two unequal lateral flagella present in Phaeophyceae

Explanation:

Phaeophyceae, also known as brown algae, are multicellular plants. They have a brownish-green color due to the pigment fucoxanthin. Flagellated spores are used to reproduce. These spores have two unequal flagella that are oriented laterally. Phaeophyceae has two flagella that are unequal and lateral. This may seem surprising given that most chromists are microscopic and unicellular, but phaeophytes share many characteristics with these other organisms. They, like other chromists, have two dissimilar flagella, if they have any at all, and the same pigments and photosynthates.

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