chrysophyceae การใช้
- Others considered them as related to the Chrysophyceae, Dinophyceae, or Cryptophyceae
- In this scheme, however, the Chrysophyceae are paraphyletic to both other groups.
- The Chrysophyceae should not be confused with the Chrysophyta, which is a more ambiguous taxon.
- Although " chrysophytes " is the anglicization of " Chrysophyta ", it generally refers to the Chrysophyceae.
- The Phytoplankton species are a composition of different families namely, Chlorophyceae ( 18 ) which is the foremost group, Chrysophyceae ( 15 ), Cyanophyceae ( 11 ), and one species each of Charophyceae, Euglenophyceae, Dinophyceae and Cryptophyceae.
- Five groups were of primary importance to the ASP : diatoms ( Class Bacillariophyceae ), green algae ( Class Chlorophyceae ), golden-brown algae ( Class Chrysophyceae ), prymnesiophytes ( Class Prymnesiophyceae ), and the eustigmatophytes ( Class Eustigmatophyceae ).
- Prymnesium parvum of Haptophyta is sometimes termed a golden alga or a golden brown algae as is Chrysophyceae of Heterokontophyta but the taxonomy of algae is under complex revision leading to contradictions in terms especially in non scholarly texts such as those from state wildlife departments.
- The Chromophyc閑s ( Chadefaud, 1950 ), renamed Chromophycota ( Chadefaud, 1960 ), included the current Ochrophyta ( autotrophic Stramenopiles ), Haptophyta ( included in Chrysophyceae until Christensen, 1962 ), Cryptophyta, Dinophyta, Euglenophyceae and Choanoflagellida ( included in Chrysophyceae until Hibberd, 1975 ).
- The Chromophyc閑s ( Chadefaud, 1950 ), renamed Chromophycota ( Chadefaud, 1960 ), included the current Ochrophyta ( autotrophic Stramenopiles ), Haptophyta ( included in Chrysophyceae until Christensen, 1962 ), Cryptophyta, Dinophyta, Euglenophyceae and Choanoflagellida ( included in Chrysophyceae until Hibberd, 1975 ).
- The current practice is the ( questionable ) synonymous use, based on morphological similarity, of the generic names " Monas " ( mostly used in the east-Asian literature ) and " Spumella " ( synonymously used in the European and American literature ) as unpigmented biflagellates in Chrysophyceae.