ALGAE
MAIN INDEX |
Types of algae |
Algae blooms |
Control of algae |
ALGAE ARE IN THE PLANT KINGDOM, BUT MAYBE THEY'RE NOT REALLY PLANTS! In Florida's freshwaters, algae are what make the water green, or even "slimy". However, green water is not necessarily undesirable, and neither are algae. In fact, algae are essential to the ecosystem and to life as we know it, and must be treated with respect.
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Algae (AL-jee) is the plural form of alga (AL-gah) and most algae are primarily photosynthetic (make their own food). They are divided into two main groups:
1. Prokaryotes - are cells that do not have a nucleus or many other types of organelles found in eukaryotes. This group contains the blue-green algae (Cyanobacteria) and other bacteria in Kingdom Bacteria.
2. Eukaryotes - In essence, the cells of all other organisms contain nuclei and other organelles. All other Kingdoms are placed within this group (Protists, Fungi, Plants, and Animals).
Algae are one of the first steps of the food web. There are microscopic algae, like phytoplankton, and there are macroalgae, algae that can be seen by the naked eye. Algae occur naturally in all types of systems and may be considered indicators of ecosystem condition. Even the mere presence of a species can give an indication of the amount and type of nutrients that run through the system. Algae provide food for all types of animals, including fish, insects, mollusks, zooplankton (microscopic animals), and humans.
Some Important Types of
Algae
Cyanophyta
Some groups of cyanobacteria are of special interest due to their ability to
produce toxins, which are potentially harmful to humans and animals:
Microcystis
Chlorophyta
Cladophora
Hydrodictyon
Bacillariophyta
Xanthophyta
Charophyta
Nitella - This is another submersed algae that grows in
slow moving rivers and lakes. It looks a lot like Chara sp., but its leaf-like projections are
smooth so Nitella does not feel rough when pulled through the hand. It is gray-green or
yellow in color and grows in shallow and deep water attached to the substrate (the bottom).
Some species are a few inches tall; others are as long as three feet or more.
These are the blue-green algae and are sometimes referred to as "cyanobacteria" because they
share many structural features with bacteria. It is the oldest (dating back 3.2 billion years ago)
and one of the most important and ubiquitous groups of algae on the planet. This diverse group
of algae can exist in all settings from freshwater to terrestrial settings and from oligotrophic (low
nutrient) to hypereutrophic (very high nutrient) environments. Some species of blue-green algae
have a competitive advantage over other algae by having the ability to fix nitrogen. Nitrogen
fixation is the process of converting unusable nitrogen (atomospheric nitrogen) into usable
nitrogen (ammonia). This characteristic allows these species to exist in areas where low nitrogen
availability inhibits growth.
Lyngbya

Lyngbya is one of the groups of cyanobacteria that are of special concern.
This long, hair-like organism is a filamentous alga that can form large benthic (on the bottom)
and surface mats (blooms). Lyngbya normally grows in dense mats at the bottoms of nutrient
enriched lakes and spring fed systems. These mats produce gasses during photosynthesis that
often causes the mats to rise to the surface. At the surface, winds pile the algal mats against
shorelines or in navigation channels; these mats can be several acres in size. Studies continue on
what influences the cause and duration of lyngbya blooms. In some areas, the blooms cover so
much of the pre-existing vegetation that it can cause serious damage and wipe out other species.
In some places in Florida, lyngbya smothers eelgrass, a food of the endangered West Indian
manatee. Some species in this genus have been linked to the production of a skin irritant leading
to "swimmers' itch".

This spherical, unicellular alga can
form a colony (group of
cells). A microscopic alga, when in bloom proportions it will turn the water
a blue-green color. Some strains of Microcystis have the ability to produce a toxin known as
microsystin. In abundance, this toxin is
potentially harmful to animals.
Chlorophyta is a large and varied group, commonly referred to as green algae. The group
includes
unicellular, colonial and filamentous varieties of algae.
Spirogyra
Spirogyra are mostly freshwater species and are commonly found in
shallow waters, around the edges of lakes and in ditches. This bright green, mat forming
filamentous alga is slimy and has no branching. It is called Spirogyra because of the way the
chloroplasts wind around the cell.
Cladophora species are also bright green. It is a branching species and feels
coarse when touched.
Hydrodictyon, also called water net, forms a net by joining five or six
cylindrical cells. It can grow so large that the net can be seen by the naked eye. The best habitat
is clear, eutrophic waters, but it is also seen in irrigation ditches and even rice fields.
Diatoms

Diatoms are a group of algae often considered the most beautiful group due to the
silica shell (glass) that houses them. These "shells" come in a wide variety of shapes and sizes
and some species can form long chains when linked together.
Commonly called the yellow-green algae, many species belonging to this group were once
placed within Chlorophyta. However, close observation of the placement and type of chlorophyll
present changed scientific thinking.
Vaucheria

Vaucheria are filamentous algae with branched cells; they grow in dense mats that
look like carpets of green felt.
This phyla is commonly called the stoneworts and is believed to be an evolutionary link to higher
plants. They occur in lakes, ponds and streams attached to the bottom by rhizoids. This group is
often mistaken for true plants due to the whorls of filaments that occur at nodes along the shoot
of the organism. This group can grow to form relatively large areas of dense underwater
monocultures .
Chara

Chara is commonly called muskgrass because of its distinctive odor. This
submersed (totally underwater) alga grows in slow moving rivers and lakes, and can overtake
other natural vegetation. Chara has a strong garlic-y odor when broken. There are leaf-like
structures whorled at uniform intervals that have tiny thorn-like projections that make muskgrass
coarse to the touch.
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A blue-green algae bloom |
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A blue-green algae bloom |
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Algae bloom in Merrits Mill Pond |
Algae need nutrients, such as nitrogen and phosphorous, and light to grow. The level of growth or productivity is often dependent on the amount of nutrients in a system. There is a classification for productivity of a system; it ranges from oligotrophic (low productivity and nutrients) to hypereutrophic (very high nutrients). Also, since algae need light to photosynthesize, how far light penetrates the water is also another limiting factor.
Blooms can have far reaching effects on the environment. Some can become so dense they can ultimately cause a problem with low oxygen levels. A decrease in oxygen causes hypoxia (low oxygen) or anoxia (no oxygen) and the other organisms in the water that need oxygen to survive, such as fish, become stressed and may die. Other blooms may release toxins that can be harmful to animals.
There is a general consensus that rapidly growing human development, and increased human use and disposal of nutrients over the past few centuries, has increased the frequency and intensity of algal blooms in many regions of the world. This has created a global effort to control harmful blooms.
Controlling blooms
Chemical Treatments
Biological Treatments
Both species are non-native species and there are many restrictions to employing them as a
means of weed control; some states prohibit their use altogether. When they are allowed, the
use is restricted to triploid carp. Triploid carp have an extra set of chromosomes that
render the fish sterile, therefore prohibiting a population explosion if the fish escapes into an
uncontrolled area.
These fish are an economical choice and have proven their effectiveness in controlling the
growth and spread of algae in some circumstances. However, there also has been a mixed
outcome when using carp as a means to control aquatic blooms. For example, the grass carp may
consume the non-nuisance vegetation and leave the noxious algae as a second choice. Research
is still being conducted on why preferences change between lakes and over time.
Physical Treatments
Mechanical Treatments
This UF/IFAS-Extension publication,
The benthic algae page on our website.
Algal Master List
This page was authored by Christina Jett, with assistance from Jeff Schardt.
Vic Ramey is the editor.
This project is a collaboration of

The most direct way to control blooms is to reduce the availability of nutrients.
Most water management organizations throughout the world are actively pursuing
a variety of nutrient control strategies. However, for some aquatic ecosystems
nutrient control is impractical, ineffective or simply too costly. For some cases
chemical or biological treatments can be helpful alternatives when administered
properly.
Copper sulfate (bluestone) and chelated copper compounds such as
Cutrine-Plus, Algae Pro, and K-TEA, as well as Endothall are common chemical treatments used
to kill algae. Chemical compounds that shade out the light for algae growth, e.g.
Aquashade, are also used to control blooms. Each chemical has its own restrictions and toxicity
to animals. Read the directions carefully before application and consult a professional before
starting your own treatment program.
Municipal water authorities often treat potable (drinking) water reservoirs when the
algal count exceeds a certain number of cells per mililiter of water. Blue-green algae numbers
usually increase late in the summer, often imparting a foul taste and odor to the water, and people
find it unacceptable. Although used only temporarily, copper herbicides are applied to the water
to lower the algal count, thus making the water more acceptable to drink.
The main biological treatment that is employed today is the use of various carp fish
species to control submersed and floating algae. Grass carp (Ctenopharyngodon
idella) is mainly used for aquatic weeds and attached submersed algae, such as
Nitella sp., and Chara sp. Where they do not prefer filamentous algae to eat, grass
carp will eat Lyngbya. The silver carp (Hypophthalmichthys molitrix) has
been shown to be an effective treatment for controlling filamentous algae, including blue-green
algae.
Physical treatments for algae in ponds include aeration and
airlifts. While aeration does not kill or remove algae from the water, it oxygenates and stirs
the water column, and can create conditions to shift from toxic and smelly blue-green algae to
preferred green algae species. The resultant algal population is usually not as dense or as toxic to
other organisms in the ponds.
Harvesters are sometimes used to skim dense mats of blue-green lyngbya alga from the surface of
lakes and rivers. Lyngbya normally grows in dense mats at the bottoms of nutrient enriched lakes
and spring fed systems. These mats produce gasses during photosynthesis that often causes the
mats to rise to the surface. At the surface, winds pile the algal mats against shorelines or in
navigation channels; these mats can be several acres in size. Managers have developed a process
called "grubbing" whereby harvesting machines lift the mats off of submersed plants such as
native eelgrass, without cutting the eelgrass. By removing the blanket of lyngbya from the
eelgrass, the plants grow and expand. Eelgrass is an important food source for manatees in the
Crystal and Homossassa Rivers.
Biology and Control of Algae, by V.V. Vandiver
Michigan State University botany course
Data is from the APIRS
database.
Photography and graphics are by Ann Murray, Sara Reinhart and Vic Ramey.
the Center for Aquatic and Invasive Plants, University of Florida,
and the Bureau of Invasive Plant Management, Florida Department of Environmental
Protection
CAIP-WEBSITE@ufl.edu
Copyright 2003 University of Florida