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AQUATIC PLANTS
Felix Bast, PhD, IFA
Centre for Biosciences,Central University of Punjab, Mansa Road, Bathinda, 151001, Punjab
Earth
 ~70% is water
 Life originated in water
 ~75% of O2 we inhale is
produced from ocean
(algae including
phytoplankton)
 80% of CO2 captured
and sequestered by the
algae
Cryptogams & Phanerogams
 Cryptogams: “lower plants”, polyphyletic
 Plants without flowers/fruits; reproduce by spores:
 Avascular
 Algae/Seaweeds
 Lichens
 Bryophytes (Mosses)
 Vascular
 Pteridophytes (Ferns)
 Phanerogams/Spermatophyta: Vascular, reproduce by seeds
 Seagrass
 Mangroves
Algal Divisions
 Chlorophyta = Green
 Phaeophyta = Brown
 Rhodophyta = Red
Halimeda opuntia
Chlorophyta: Green Algae
Caulerpa racemosa
Caulerpa sertularioides
Dictyosphaeria cavernosa
Codium edule
Sargassum polyphyllum
Sargassum echinocarpum
Phaeophyta: Brown Algae
Turbinaria ornata
Padina japonica
Hydroclathrus
clathratus
Hypnea chordacea Asparagopsis taxiformis
Galaxaura fastigiata
Acanthophora spicifera
Ahnfeltia concinna
Rhodophyta: Red Algae
INSPIRE Faculty Award
Chemical and
Phylogenetic
Diversity of
Seaweeds in
Indian
Subcontinent
DST-
INSPIRE
Award
2012-
2017
35 Lakhs
Seaweeds: Green algae
 Have the same pigments
as land plants (chlorophyll)
 More than 7,000 species
 Marine algae are “macro”
 Alteration of generations
• Filamentus algae such as Ulva forms paper thin sheets.
• “Dead man’s fingers,” Codium fragile and
several spp. of Culerpa are known for their
tube-like structures.
•Bryopsis has potent anticancer properties
Boergesenia forbesii
Acetabularia acetabulum
Phaeophyta
 Largest (size) and most complex of the algae
 Nearly all are marine (~1500 spp.)
 Brown color comes from accessory pigments
(fucoxanthin)
Padina (brown algae) with flat, calcified blades. From A&N
• Fucus sprialis a common brown algae can be found on
rocky shores. Unlike other algae in this category, its thallus
lacks gas bladders.
Kelps
 Kelps are the largest seaweed we encounter in the ocean.
They are also the most complex.
 Due to this large size, many of the kelps are harvested for
food!
 Who knows where we will find seaweed next?
Sea plam (Postelsia palmaeformis)
containsinternal support structures
that help them withstand wave
action!
It’s also eated on a regular basis as
“sea noodles.”
Macrocystis pyrifera, the largest of the kelps
anchors itself to the sea floor by use a massive
holdfast. Here we can see not only the large
blades, but the extensive pneumatocysts used for
buoyancy.
Pneumatocysts developed as a
means to maximize energy
production through
photosynthesis by
keeping the seaweed
close to the surface.
These kelp obtain huge proportions
growing as much as 0.5m/day!
These when large kelp group
together a kelp forest is develops.
Kelp forest are great for sheltering
all sorts of marine life, including
Garabaldi, scallops, seals and
sharks.
They also provide an opportunity for
selective harvesting of the upper
sections of the blades for food.
• Although many red algae are in fact
red; due to the prescence of red
pigments known as phycobilins,
which mask chlorophyll, these algae
may display an even greater intensity
when exposed to sunlight!
Nearly 4,000 marine species exist and
many are used for food or other specialty
products.
Porphya, a “red” algae
Rhodophyta
Corallina, a coralline algae, deposits CaCO3 within
its cell walls which provides structural support and
often encrusting many surrounding surfaces.
Galaxaura rugosa from Andaman islands
Sexual Reproduction, or not…
 Sexual reproduction is expensive both energetically and
physiologically.
 Sometimes it’s better to reproduce by asexual means from
fragments, spores, or buds.
 Sometimes algae use both sexual and asexual reproduction
depending on environmental conditions.
Off-shore cultivation methods
Four basic types of seaplant agronomic
methods.
 A. Floating raft in deep sea with
deadweight mooring. Raft is floated
all the time.
 B. Semi-floating raft in shallow
water. Raft is floated at high tides but
gets exposed during low tides.
 C. Off bottom in shallow water. Nets
getimmersed in high tide and exposed
in low tide.
 D. Bottom planting in shallow water.
Immersed at all the times.Water
levels at high-tide are shown above
low tide in all illustrations
BAST, F 2014. An Illustrated Review on Cultivation and Life History of Agronomically Important Seaplants. In Seaweed: Mineral Composition, Nutritional and
Antioxidant Benefits andAgricultural Uses, EdsVitor Hugo Pomin, 39-70. Nova Publishers, NewYork ISBN: 978-1-63117-571-8
Invasive algae
Our group’s contribution
 BAST, F., JOHN, A.A. AND BHUSHAN, S. 2014. Strong endemism of bloom-forming tubular Ulva in Indian west coast, with description
of Ulva paschima Sp. Nov. (Ulvales, Chlorophyta. PLoS ONE 9(10): e109295. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0109295 (IF:3.73) PDF
 BAST, F., JOHN, A.A. AND BHUSHAN, S. 2015.Cladophora goensis- a bloom forming marine algae from Goa, India. IndianJournal of
Marine Sciences (Accepted) (IF:0.57) PDF
 BAST, F., BHUSHAN, S AND JOHN, A.A. 2014. DNA Barcoding of a new record of epi-endophytic green
algae Ulvella leptochaete (Ulvellaceae, Chlorophyta) in India. Journal of Biosciences 39:711-716 (IF:1.8) PDF
 BAST, F., BHUSHAN, S. AND JOHN, A.A. 2015. Brown barcoded as red but reality is green! How epiphytic green algae confuse
phycologists?Webbia- Journal of PlantTaxonomy andGeography (Tailor and Francis, UK) (Accepted) DOI:
10.1080/00837792.2015.1014217
 BAST, F. 2015.Taxonomic reappraisal of Monostromataceae (Ulvophyceae, Chlorophyta) Based on Multi-Locus Phylogeny. Webbia-
Journal of PlantTaxonomy and Geography (Tailor and Francis, UK) (Accepted) DOI: 10.1080/00837792.2015.1004845
 BAST, F., KUBOTA, S. ANDOKUDA, K. 2015. Phylogeographic Assessment of Panmictic Monostroma Species from Kuroshio Coast,
Japan Reveals Sympatric Speciation. Journal of Applied Phycology (IF:2.5) DOI 10.1007/s10811-014-0452-x PDF
 BAST, F 2014. Seaweeds in Japanese Culture:An analysis of medieval Waka poetry. The Phycologist (UK) 86:24-27 ISSN:0965-
5301 PDF
 BAST, F., BHUSHAN, S. AND JOHN, A.A. 2014. Morphological and molecular assessment of native carrageenophyte Hypnea
valentiae (Cystocloniaceae, Gigartinales) in Indian Subcontinent Phykos 44(1) 52-58 ISSN: 0554-1182 PDF
Popular Science
 BAST, F 2014. Seaweeds: Ancestors of land plants with rich diversity. Resonance, 19(2) 1032-1043 ISSN: 0971-8044 PDF
Endophytic algae
Products from Seaweed:
Phycocolloids—form gels and increase viscosity of liquids
Algin—stabilizer in ice cream (Macrocystis)
Carageenan—emulsifier in jellies (Hypnea)
Agar—jellies & Ice creams (and of course all your plates in microbiology,
Gelidium, Pterocladiella)
Other important microalgae
 Microalgae are interesting candidates for biofuel production
 Dunaliella salina-extreme halophilic microalgae
 Chlorella-a chlorophyte (green algae) is used as a
nutraceutical, in biofuel production and Carbon Capture and
Sequestration
 Spirulina-Cyanobacterial genus important as dietary
supplement
 Prochlorococcus and Synechococcus are important
picoplankton syanobacteria that are responsible for vast
majority (~70%) of CO2 fixation in earth
The Seaweed Paradox
 Highest seaweed consuming countries:
 East Asia (Japan, Korea, China, Indonesia, Philippines)
 Europe (Ireland, Ulster,Wales)
 Coastal areas of USA and Canada
 Prevalence rate of following diseases are low in all these
countries
 Breast cancer
 Colorectal cancer
 Coronary heart disease
Drugs from Algae
S. No Natural product Algal taxa possessing the
product
1 Kahalalide-F Bryopsis
2 Sulphated polysaccharides :
Fucoidan & Laminarin
Brown algae
3 Sulphated polysaccharides :
Translam
Laminaria (Brown algae)
4 Sulphated polysaccharides :
Ulvan
Green algae
5 Chondriamide A: A cyclic
depsipeptide
Chondria atropurpurea
6 Terpenes andTriterpenoids Bifurcaria bifurcata, Caulerpa
taxifolia, Cystoseira
mediterrane, Cystophora
usneoides
7 Bis (2,3-dibromo-4,5-
dihydroxybenzyl) ether
(BDDE) and other
Bromophenols (BPs)
Various marine macroalgae
Drugs from Sea grant (Ministry of
Earth Sciences)
Phylogenetic
Selection OfTarget
Taxa For Anti-
ProliferativeAnd Anti-
Metastatic Marine
Natural Products
From Seaweeds Of
Indian Coast
Ministry of
Earth
Sciences-
Drugs from
the Sea
Program
2015-
18
91.02
Lakhs
Terrestrial algae
 Most of the terrestrial
algae are greens
Our works have revealed
that terrestrial algae
Trentepohlia caused blood
rain
Freshwater algae
 We are also working on freshwater (limnetic) algae
 Greens
 Chlamydomonas
 Volvox
 Spyrogyra
 Gonium
 Chlorella
 Scenedesmus
 Trebouxia
 Botryococcus
 Zygnema
 Ulothrix
 Euglena
 Blue-greens
 Oscillatoria
 Anabaena
 Nostoc
 Diatoms (Bacillariophyceae)-brown algae with silica frustules
Our group is working on
Molecular Systematics of
freshwater algae from Punjab
Lichens
 Symbiotic association of algae (Photobiont) with fungus
 Mainly three types:
 Fruticose-Shrubs
 Foliose-Leaf like
 Crustose-Like crust of paint on surface
 Important as founder populations of barren land
 Important in weathering of rocks
 Foliose lichen
 1.The cortex is the outer layer of tightly woven fungus filaments
(hyphae) 2.This photobiont layer has photosynthesizing green algae 3.
Loosely packed hyphae in the medulla 4. A tightly woven lower cortex,
with anchoring hyphae called rhizines where the fungus attaches to the
substrate.
 Classified based on fungus
 Largest diversity of lichenised fungi are in Phylum
Ascomycota
 Trebouxia, a green algae, is the most common photobiont of
lichen
Bryophytes
 Non vascular cryptogams that grows in damp, humid habitats;
all have gametophyte dominant lifecycle
 Formerly consists of mosses, hornworts (division
Anthocerotophyta) and liverworts (division Marchantiophyta)
 Recent phylogenetic evidences suggest that hornworts and
liverworts are separate from bryophytes.The term bryophytes
used to refer only mosses
Our group is working on
phylogeography of bryophytes
in Indian subcontinent
Phylogeny of land plants: Two
alternative hypothesis
 Polysporangiates-many sporangia plant; consists of vascular
plants (tracheophytes). Important aquatic vascular plants are
pteridophytes, seagrasses and mangroves
Pteridophytes
 Consists of Ferns
 Life cycle consists of alternation of generations, characterized
by alternating diploid sporophytic and haploid gametophytic
phases
Classification
Seagrasses
 Angiosperms
 Monocots
 OrderAlismatales
 Four families:
 Cymodoceaceae
 Hydrocharitaceae
 Zosteraceae
 Posidoniaceae
Seagrass genera
 Cymodoceaceae family
 Amphibolis
 Cymodocea
 Halodule
 Syringodium
 Thalassodendron
 Hydrocharitaceae family
 Enhalus
 Halophila
 Thalassia
 Posidoniaceae family
 Posidonia
 Zosteraceae family
 Phyllospadix
 Zostera
Seagrasses reproduce through rhizomes, or horizontal stems which
grow beneath the sediment.
Halophila
Halophilia hawaiiana- from Hawaii
Zostera marina from Hokkaido, Japan
Mangroves
 Angiosperms > Eudicots (Various orders, polyphyletic)
 Woody plants that thrive in intertidal saline coastal
environments/swamps
 Many (black/gray mangroves) have pneumatophores-
specialized root-like structures which stick up out of the soil
like straws for breathing
Mangroves
 Mangroves thrive in salty environments and are able to
obtain freshwater from saltwater.
 Some spp. secrete excess salt through their leaves while
other block absorption of salt at their roots.
BlackMangrove,Avecenniagerminans.
RedMangrove,Rhizophoramangle.
Red Mangrove
RedMangrove,RhizophoramangleDolphinIsland,Andaman.
WhiteMangrove,Lagunculariaracemosa.
Mangroves
Our group is working on
phylogeography of mangroves in
Sunderbans and Kerala
Mangroves from Sundarbans Mangroves from Kerala
Other important aquatic plants
 Water hyacinth Eichhornia crassipes-an invasive aquatic plant
originated in Amazon basin
Edible aquatic plants
 A number of seaweeds are edible.
 Wild rice (Zizania), water caltrop (Trapa natans), Chinese
water chestnut (Eleocharis dulcis), Indian lotus (Nelumbo
nucifera), water spinach (Ipomoea aquatica) and watercress
(Rorippa nasturtium-aquaticum)
 Marine Biology:
 Taxonomy, phylogeography and molecular systematics of
algae, including marine macro and micro algae,
epi/endophytic algae, terrestrial algae, and freshwater
algae.
 Botany:
 Taxonomy, phylogeography and molecular systematics of
a number of higher plants, including medicinal shrubs:
Tulsi, Sarpagandha, Aswagandha, Brahmi, Betel,
Shankapushpa, and Ashoka, trees: Ficus and Salvadora.
 Linguistics:
 Tracing linguistic phylogeny of Indian languages using
computational phylogenetics.
 MedicinalChemistry:
 Phylogenetic Selection OfTargetTaxa For Anti-
Proliferative AndAnti-Metastatic Marine Natural Products
From Seaweeds Of Indian Coast
 Cancer Research:
 Phylogenetic structures in clonal evolution of metastatic
cancers; Germ-line SNPs in BRCA-1 of Malwa Population,
Genotoxicity of drinking water from Malwa region, Punjab.
http://sg.sg/bastfelix
 Contents hosted at this site:
Recorded video lectures of the
class hosted atYouTube,
PowerPoint presentations,
lecture hand-outs, course
materials including free e-
books, pdf files of scholarly
literature referred in the class,
solved quizzes and question
papers, consolidated student
assignments and term papers,
and pertinent hyperlinks to
news items, podcasts, and
MOOCs.
OP-79, CPDHE-University of Delhi, January 2015 66
Thanks!
felix.bast@gmail.com

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Aquatic plants

  • 1. AQUATIC PLANTS Felix Bast, PhD, IFA Centre for Biosciences,Central University of Punjab, Mansa Road, Bathinda, 151001, Punjab
  • 2. Earth  ~70% is water  Life originated in water  ~75% of O2 we inhale is produced from ocean (algae including phytoplankton)  80% of CO2 captured and sequestered by the algae
  • 3. Cryptogams & Phanerogams  Cryptogams: “lower plants”, polyphyletic  Plants without flowers/fruits; reproduce by spores:  Avascular  Algae/Seaweeds  Lichens  Bryophytes (Mosses)  Vascular  Pteridophytes (Ferns)  Phanerogams/Spermatophyta: Vascular, reproduce by seeds  Seagrass  Mangroves
  • 4.
  • 5. Algal Divisions  Chlorophyta = Green  Phaeophyta = Brown  Rhodophyta = Red
  • 6. Halimeda opuntia Chlorophyta: Green Algae Caulerpa racemosa Caulerpa sertularioides Dictyosphaeria cavernosa Codium edule
  • 7. Sargassum polyphyllum Sargassum echinocarpum Phaeophyta: Brown Algae Turbinaria ornata Padina japonica Hydroclathrus clathratus
  • 8. Hypnea chordacea Asparagopsis taxiformis Galaxaura fastigiata Acanthophora spicifera Ahnfeltia concinna Rhodophyta: Red Algae
  • 9. INSPIRE Faculty Award Chemical and Phylogenetic Diversity of Seaweeds in Indian Subcontinent DST- INSPIRE Award 2012- 2017 35 Lakhs
  • 10. Seaweeds: Green algae  Have the same pigments as land plants (chlorophyll)  More than 7,000 species  Marine algae are “macro”  Alteration of generations
  • 11. • Filamentus algae such as Ulva forms paper thin sheets.
  • 12. • “Dead man’s fingers,” Codium fragile and several spp. of Culerpa are known for their tube-like structures. •Bryopsis has potent anticancer properties
  • 14. Phaeophyta  Largest (size) and most complex of the algae  Nearly all are marine (~1500 spp.)  Brown color comes from accessory pigments (fucoxanthin)
  • 15. Padina (brown algae) with flat, calcified blades. From A&N
  • 16. • Fucus sprialis a common brown algae can be found on rocky shores. Unlike other algae in this category, its thallus lacks gas bladders.
  • 17. Kelps  Kelps are the largest seaweed we encounter in the ocean. They are also the most complex.  Due to this large size, many of the kelps are harvested for food!  Who knows where we will find seaweed next?
  • 18. Sea plam (Postelsia palmaeformis) containsinternal support structures that help them withstand wave action! It’s also eated on a regular basis as “sea noodles.”
  • 19. Macrocystis pyrifera, the largest of the kelps anchors itself to the sea floor by use a massive holdfast. Here we can see not only the large blades, but the extensive pneumatocysts used for buoyancy. Pneumatocysts developed as a means to maximize energy production through photosynthesis by keeping the seaweed close to the surface.
  • 20. These kelp obtain huge proportions growing as much as 0.5m/day! These when large kelp group together a kelp forest is develops. Kelp forest are great for sheltering all sorts of marine life, including Garabaldi, scallops, seals and sharks. They also provide an opportunity for selective harvesting of the upper sections of the blades for food.
  • 21. • Although many red algae are in fact red; due to the prescence of red pigments known as phycobilins, which mask chlorophyll, these algae may display an even greater intensity when exposed to sunlight! Nearly 4,000 marine species exist and many are used for food or other specialty products. Porphya, a “red” algae Rhodophyta
  • 22. Corallina, a coralline algae, deposits CaCO3 within its cell walls which provides structural support and often encrusting many surrounding surfaces.
  • 23. Galaxaura rugosa from Andaman islands
  • 24. Sexual Reproduction, or not…  Sexual reproduction is expensive both energetically and physiologically.  Sometimes it’s better to reproduce by asexual means from fragments, spores, or buds.  Sometimes algae use both sexual and asexual reproduction depending on environmental conditions.
  • 25.
  • 26. Off-shore cultivation methods Four basic types of seaplant agronomic methods.  A. Floating raft in deep sea with deadweight mooring. Raft is floated all the time.  B. Semi-floating raft in shallow water. Raft is floated at high tides but gets exposed during low tides.  C. Off bottom in shallow water. Nets getimmersed in high tide and exposed in low tide.  D. Bottom planting in shallow water. Immersed at all the times.Water levels at high-tide are shown above low tide in all illustrations BAST, F 2014. An Illustrated Review on Cultivation and Life History of Agronomically Important Seaplants. In Seaweed: Mineral Composition, Nutritional and Antioxidant Benefits andAgricultural Uses, EdsVitor Hugo Pomin, 39-70. Nova Publishers, NewYork ISBN: 978-1-63117-571-8
  • 28. Our group’s contribution  BAST, F., JOHN, A.A. AND BHUSHAN, S. 2014. Strong endemism of bloom-forming tubular Ulva in Indian west coast, with description of Ulva paschima Sp. Nov. (Ulvales, Chlorophyta. PLoS ONE 9(10): e109295. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0109295 (IF:3.73) PDF  BAST, F., JOHN, A.A. AND BHUSHAN, S. 2015.Cladophora goensis- a bloom forming marine algae from Goa, India. IndianJournal of Marine Sciences (Accepted) (IF:0.57) PDF  BAST, F., BHUSHAN, S AND JOHN, A.A. 2014. DNA Barcoding of a new record of epi-endophytic green algae Ulvella leptochaete (Ulvellaceae, Chlorophyta) in India. Journal of Biosciences 39:711-716 (IF:1.8) PDF  BAST, F., BHUSHAN, S. AND JOHN, A.A. 2015. Brown barcoded as red but reality is green! How epiphytic green algae confuse phycologists?Webbia- Journal of PlantTaxonomy andGeography (Tailor and Francis, UK) (Accepted) DOI: 10.1080/00837792.2015.1014217  BAST, F. 2015.Taxonomic reappraisal of Monostromataceae (Ulvophyceae, Chlorophyta) Based on Multi-Locus Phylogeny. Webbia- Journal of PlantTaxonomy and Geography (Tailor and Francis, UK) (Accepted) DOI: 10.1080/00837792.2015.1004845  BAST, F., KUBOTA, S. ANDOKUDA, K. 2015. Phylogeographic Assessment of Panmictic Monostroma Species from Kuroshio Coast, Japan Reveals Sympatric Speciation. Journal of Applied Phycology (IF:2.5) DOI 10.1007/s10811-014-0452-x PDF  BAST, F 2014. Seaweeds in Japanese Culture:An analysis of medieval Waka poetry. The Phycologist (UK) 86:24-27 ISSN:0965- 5301 PDF  BAST, F., BHUSHAN, S. AND JOHN, A.A. 2014. Morphological and molecular assessment of native carrageenophyte Hypnea valentiae (Cystocloniaceae, Gigartinales) in Indian Subcontinent Phykos 44(1) 52-58 ISSN: 0554-1182 PDF Popular Science  BAST, F 2014. Seaweeds: Ancestors of land plants with rich diversity. Resonance, 19(2) 1032-1043 ISSN: 0971-8044 PDF
  • 30.
  • 31. Products from Seaweed: Phycocolloids—form gels and increase viscosity of liquids Algin—stabilizer in ice cream (Macrocystis) Carageenan—emulsifier in jellies (Hypnea) Agar—jellies & Ice creams (and of course all your plates in microbiology, Gelidium, Pterocladiella)
  • 32.
  • 33. Other important microalgae  Microalgae are interesting candidates for biofuel production  Dunaliella salina-extreme halophilic microalgae  Chlorella-a chlorophyte (green algae) is used as a nutraceutical, in biofuel production and Carbon Capture and Sequestration  Spirulina-Cyanobacterial genus important as dietary supplement  Prochlorococcus and Synechococcus are important picoplankton syanobacteria that are responsible for vast majority (~70%) of CO2 fixation in earth
  • 34. The Seaweed Paradox  Highest seaweed consuming countries:  East Asia (Japan, Korea, China, Indonesia, Philippines)  Europe (Ireland, Ulster,Wales)  Coastal areas of USA and Canada  Prevalence rate of following diseases are low in all these countries  Breast cancer  Colorectal cancer  Coronary heart disease
  • 35. Drugs from Algae S. No Natural product Algal taxa possessing the product 1 Kahalalide-F Bryopsis 2 Sulphated polysaccharides : Fucoidan & Laminarin Brown algae 3 Sulphated polysaccharides : Translam Laminaria (Brown algae) 4 Sulphated polysaccharides : Ulvan Green algae 5 Chondriamide A: A cyclic depsipeptide Chondria atropurpurea 6 Terpenes andTriterpenoids Bifurcaria bifurcata, Caulerpa taxifolia, Cystoseira mediterrane, Cystophora usneoides 7 Bis (2,3-dibromo-4,5- dihydroxybenzyl) ether (BDDE) and other Bromophenols (BPs) Various marine macroalgae
  • 36. Drugs from Sea grant (Ministry of Earth Sciences) Phylogenetic Selection OfTarget Taxa For Anti- ProliferativeAnd Anti- Metastatic Marine Natural Products From Seaweeds Of Indian Coast Ministry of Earth Sciences- Drugs from the Sea Program 2015- 18 91.02 Lakhs
  • 37. Terrestrial algae  Most of the terrestrial algae are greens Our works have revealed that terrestrial algae Trentepohlia caused blood rain
  • 38. Freshwater algae  We are also working on freshwater (limnetic) algae  Greens  Chlamydomonas  Volvox  Spyrogyra  Gonium  Chlorella  Scenedesmus  Trebouxia  Botryococcus  Zygnema  Ulothrix  Euglena  Blue-greens  Oscillatoria  Anabaena  Nostoc  Diatoms (Bacillariophyceae)-brown algae with silica frustules Our group is working on Molecular Systematics of freshwater algae from Punjab
  • 39. Lichens  Symbiotic association of algae (Photobiont) with fungus  Mainly three types:  Fruticose-Shrubs  Foliose-Leaf like  Crustose-Like crust of paint on surface  Important as founder populations of barren land  Important in weathering of rocks
  • 40.  Foliose lichen  1.The cortex is the outer layer of tightly woven fungus filaments (hyphae) 2.This photobiont layer has photosynthesizing green algae 3. Loosely packed hyphae in the medulla 4. A tightly woven lower cortex, with anchoring hyphae called rhizines where the fungus attaches to the substrate.
  • 41.  Classified based on fungus  Largest diversity of lichenised fungi are in Phylum Ascomycota  Trebouxia, a green algae, is the most common photobiont of lichen
  • 42.
  • 43. Bryophytes  Non vascular cryptogams that grows in damp, humid habitats; all have gametophyte dominant lifecycle  Formerly consists of mosses, hornworts (division Anthocerotophyta) and liverworts (division Marchantiophyta)  Recent phylogenetic evidences suggest that hornworts and liverworts are separate from bryophytes.The term bryophytes used to refer only mosses
  • 44. Our group is working on phylogeography of bryophytes in Indian subcontinent
  • 45. Phylogeny of land plants: Two alternative hypothesis  Polysporangiates-many sporangia plant; consists of vascular plants (tracheophytes). Important aquatic vascular plants are pteridophytes, seagrasses and mangroves
  • 46. Pteridophytes  Consists of Ferns  Life cycle consists of alternation of generations, characterized by alternating diploid sporophytic and haploid gametophytic phases
  • 48. Seagrasses  Angiosperms  Monocots  OrderAlismatales  Four families:  Cymodoceaceae  Hydrocharitaceae  Zosteraceae  Posidoniaceae
  • 49. Seagrass genera  Cymodoceaceae family  Amphibolis  Cymodocea  Halodule  Syringodium  Thalassodendron  Hydrocharitaceae family  Enhalus  Halophila  Thalassia  Posidoniaceae family  Posidonia  Zosteraceae family  Phyllospadix  Zostera
  • 50. Seagrasses reproduce through rhizomes, or horizontal stems which grow beneath the sediment.
  • 52. Zostera marina from Hokkaido, Japan
  • 53. Mangroves  Angiosperms > Eudicots (Various orders, polyphyletic)  Woody plants that thrive in intertidal saline coastal environments/swamps  Many (black/gray mangroves) have pneumatophores- specialized root-like structures which stick up out of the soil like straws for breathing
  • 54. Mangroves  Mangroves thrive in salty environments and are able to obtain freshwater from saltwater.  Some spp. secrete excess salt through their leaves while other block absorption of salt at their roots.
  • 56.
  • 57.
  • 62. Mangroves Our group is working on phylogeography of mangroves in Sunderbans and Kerala Mangroves from Sundarbans Mangroves from Kerala
  • 63. Other important aquatic plants  Water hyacinth Eichhornia crassipes-an invasive aquatic plant originated in Amazon basin
  • 64. Edible aquatic plants  A number of seaweeds are edible.  Wild rice (Zizania), water caltrop (Trapa natans), Chinese water chestnut (Eleocharis dulcis), Indian lotus (Nelumbo nucifera), water spinach (Ipomoea aquatica) and watercress (Rorippa nasturtium-aquaticum)
  • 65.  Marine Biology:  Taxonomy, phylogeography and molecular systematics of algae, including marine macro and micro algae, epi/endophytic algae, terrestrial algae, and freshwater algae.  Botany:  Taxonomy, phylogeography and molecular systematics of a number of higher plants, including medicinal shrubs: Tulsi, Sarpagandha, Aswagandha, Brahmi, Betel, Shankapushpa, and Ashoka, trees: Ficus and Salvadora.  Linguistics:  Tracing linguistic phylogeny of Indian languages using computational phylogenetics.  MedicinalChemistry:  Phylogenetic Selection OfTargetTaxa For Anti- Proliferative AndAnti-Metastatic Marine Natural Products From Seaweeds Of Indian Coast  Cancer Research:  Phylogenetic structures in clonal evolution of metastatic cancers; Germ-line SNPs in BRCA-1 of Malwa Population, Genotoxicity of drinking water from Malwa region, Punjab.
  • 66. http://sg.sg/bastfelix  Contents hosted at this site: Recorded video lectures of the class hosted atYouTube, PowerPoint presentations, lecture hand-outs, course materials including free e- books, pdf files of scholarly literature referred in the class, solved quizzes and question papers, consolidated student assignments and term papers, and pertinent hyperlinks to news items, podcasts, and MOOCs. OP-79, CPDHE-University of Delhi, January 2015 66