Algae, Cyanobacteria, other bacteria and viruses


Algae is a photosynthetic plant that grows in water. Macroalgae are large and complex (e.g. seaweed). Microalgae are microscopic and simple, with each individual plant – or cell –  being invisible to the naked eye. Microalgae can be found in rivers, dams, lakes, waterways, and oceans. While individual cells can't be seen with the naked eye, together microalgae can grow and group together, turning the water it lives and grows in shades of green, red, and gold. In some cases, this microalgae can be bio-luminescent. (https://www.uts.edu.au/climate-change-cluster/our-research/deep-green-biotech-hub/education-and-outreach/what-algae)

Cyanobacteria (blue-green algae) are a type of microscopic, algae-like bacteria which inhabit freshwater, coastal and marine waters. Cyanobacteria photosynthesise like plants and have similar requirements for sunlight, nutrients and carbon dioxide to grow and produce oxygen. There are many different varieties of cyanobacteria. While often a green or blue-green colour, they can also be white, brown, blue, yellow-brown, or red. (https://www.waterquality.gov.au/issues/blue-green-algae)


Algae, Cyanobacteria, other bacteria and viruses

Announcements

7 Mar 2025

Since 1 Jan 2025, NatureMapr 44% of all sightings uploaded were NSW based, while 43% were from the ACT.The remaining 13% were from other states, with VIC coming in third at 5%.Strictly speaking, 67% o...


Continue reading

NatureMapr Data Collector 6.2.1 update

Critical nature positive infrastructure update

IMPORTANT NatureMapr Data Collector 6.2.0 mobile app update

Known issue affecting user registration via naturemapr mobile app

Discussion

Maren wrote:
23 Jan 2025
Ah, ok thanks

Alga / Cyanobacterium
wombey wrote:
22 Jan 2025
No, not frog eggs. I think just algae?

Alga / Cyanobacterium
Heino1 wrote:
7 Nov 2024
My guess is an orange alga (genus Trentepohlia) on bleached wood.

Trentepohlia sp. (genus)
Tapirlord wrote:
18 Oct 2024
Cheers Jane

Chara sp. (genus)
18 Oct 2024
Okay !

Chara sp. (genus)
801,613 sightings of 21,649 species from 13,542 contributors
CCA 3.0 | privacy
We acknowledge the Traditional Owners of this land and acknowledge their continuing connection to their culture. We pay our respects to their Elders past and present.