Algae: anatomy, biochemistry, and biotechnology
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
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Boca Raton ; London ; New York
CRC Press
2023
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Ausgabe: | Third edition |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | xvii, 438 Seiten Illustrationen, Diagramme |
ISBN: | 9781032035123 9781032035147 |
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adam_text | Contents Preface.............................................................................................................................................xiii Authors’ Biographies....................................................................................................................... xv Introduction.................................................................................................................................... xvii Chapter 1 General Overview........................................................................................................ 1 Definition...................................................................................................................... 1 Classification................................................................................................................ 2 Summaries of the 12 Algal Phyla................................................................................. 2 Cyanobacteria.......................................................................................................... 2 Glaucophyta............................................................................................................. 8 Rhodophy ta............................................................................................................. 9 Prasinodermatophyta and Chlorophyta................................................................. 11 Charophyta............................................................................................................ 15
Haptophyta............................................................................................................ 17 Cryptophy ta........................................................................................................... 18 Ochrophyta............................................................................................................ 19 Miozoa—Dinophyceae.......................................................................................... 23 Cercozoa—Chlorarachniophyceae........................................................................26 Euglenozoa—Euglenophyceae .............................................................................. 26 Structure of Thallus—Cytomorphological Types.......................................................28 Unicells and Unicell Colonial Type....................................................................... 28 Filamentous Type.................................................................................................. 28 Siphonocladous Type............................................................................................. 28 Siphonous Type...................................................................................................... 32 Parenchymatous and Pseudo-Parenchymatous Type............................................. 35 Palmelloid Type..................................................................................................... 36 Nutrition..................................................................................................................... 37
Reproduction.............................................................................................................. 38 Vegetative and Asexual Reproduction................................................................... 38 Binary Fission or Cellular Bisection................................................................. 38 Zoospores, Aplanospores, and Autospores....................................................... 38 Autocolony Formation...................................................................................... 38 Fragmentation................................................................................................... 40 Resting Stages................................................................................................... 40 Sexual Reproduction.............................................................................................. 41 Haplontic or Zygotic Life Cycle........................................................................ 41 Diplontic or Gametic Life Cycle....................................................................... 42 Diplohaplontic or Sporic Life Cycle................................................................. 42 Occurrence and Distribution...................................................................................... 42 Biotic Interactions..................................................................................................44 Viruses..............................................................................................................44
Bacteria............................................................................................................. 48 Arthropods........................................................................................................ 50 Amphibians....................................................................................................... 51 Reptiles............................................................................................................. 53 Other Animals and Humans............................................................................. 53 vii
viii Contents Extreme Habitats.......................................................................................................... 56 Cold Environments................................................................................................. 56 Hot Environments................................................................................................... 58 Dry Environments .................................................................................................. 60 Space.........................................................................................................................62 Endosymbiosis and the Origin of Eukaryotic Photosynthesis..................................... 63 Chapter 2 Biogeochemical Role of Algae......................................................................................... 71 The Roles of Algae in Biogeochemistry..........................................................................71 The Oxygen and Carbon Cycles...................................................................................... 72 The Nitrogen Cycle...........................................................................................................76 The Phosphorus Cycle...................................................................................................... 81 The Iron Cycle................................................................................................................... 83 The Silicon Cycle..............................................................................................................
88 The Sulfur Cycle...............................................................................................................92 Limiting Nutrients............................................................................................................ 94 Chapter 3 Anatomy......................................................................................................................... 101 Cytomorphology and Ultrastructure.............................................................................. 101 Outside the Cell.......................................................................................................... 101 Type 1—Simple Cell Membrane......................................................................... 101 Type 2—Cell Surface With Additional Extracellular Material....................... 102 Mucilages and Sheaths..................................................................................... 102 Scales................................................................................................................ 103 Frustules............................................................................................................ 107 Cell Walls.......................................................................................................... 110 Loricas.............................................................................................................. Ill Skeletons........................................................................................................... 112 Type 3—Cell Surface With Additional
Intracellular Material in Vesicles.............................................................................................................. 114 Type 4—Cell Surface With Additional Extracellular and Intracellular Material............................................................................................ 116 First Level......................................................................................................... 119 Second Level.................................................................................................... 119 Third Level...................................................................................................... 121 Flagella and Associated Structures..........................................................................122 Flagellar Shape and Surface Features................................................................ 123 Flagellar Scales................................................................................................ 123 Flagellar Hairs................................................................................................. 126 Flagellar Spines................................................................................................ 128 Internal Features................................................................................................... 128 Axoneme...........................................................................................................128 Paraxial Rod....................................................................................................
129 Other Intra-Flagellar Accessory Structures.................................................. 130 Transition Zone................................................................................................ 132 Basal Bodies.................................................................................................... 136 Root System..................................................................................................... 138 Glaucophyta..................................................................................................... 139
Contents ix Prasinodermatophyta, Chlorophyta, Charophyta................................... 139 Haptophyta.................................................................................................. 145 Cryptophyta.................................................................................................145 Ochrophyta.................................................................................................. 147 Cercozoa—Chlorarachniophyceae.......................................................... 150 Miozoa—Dinophyceae............................................................................. 151 Euglenozoa—Euglenophyceae.................................................................. 152 How Algae Move............................................................................................................ 154 Swimming................................................................................................................. 154 Movements Other Than Swimming........................................................................ 165 Buoyancy Control...................................................................................................... 168 How a Flagellum Is Built: Intra-Flagellar Transport.............................................. 170 How a Flagellar Motor Works..................................................................................170 How a Paraxial Rod Works.................................................................................... 171 The Photoreceptor
Apparatus........................................................................................171 Types of Photoreceptive Systems............................................................................ 173 Type 1.....................................................................................................................173 Type II.................................................................................................................. 175 Type III................................................................................................................. 177 Photoreceptive Proteins............................................................................................ 177 Behavioral and Physiological Features........................................................................ 180 Sampling Strategies................................................................................................... 181 Trajectory Control.....................................................................................................182 Signal Transmission................................................................................................. 183 An Example: Photoreceptor and Photoreception in Euglena.................................... 183 Chloroplasts............................................................................................................... 188 Cyanobacteria.......................................................................................................189
Glaucophyta.......................................................................................................... 189 Rhodophyta........................................................................................................... 191 Prasinodermatophyta, Chlorophyta, Charophyta.............................................. 191 Haptophyta............................................................................................................ 192 Cryptophyta..........................................................................................................192 Ochrophyta........................................................................................................... 193 Cercozoa—Chlorarachniophyceae..................................................................... 194 Miozoa—Dinophyceae........................................................................................195 Euglenozoa—Euglenophyceae........................................................................... 197 The Nucleus, Nuclear Division, and Cytokinesis................................................... 198 Rhodophyta........................................................................................................... 199 Prasinodermatophyta, Chlorophyta, Charophyta............................................. 199 Cryptophyta......................................................................................................... 200 Miozoa—Dinophyceae....................................................................................... 200
Euglenozoa—Euglenophyceae........................................................................... 201 Ejectile Organelles and Feeding Apparatus........................................................... 203 Prasinodermatophyta, Chlorophyta, Charophyta............................................. 203 Haptophyta........................................................................................................... 203 Cryptophyta......................................................................................................... 204 Ochrophyta.......................................................................................................... 205 Cercozoa—Chlorarachiophyceae.......................................................................205 Miozoa—Dinophyceae....................................................................................... 205 Euglenozoa—Euglenophyceae........................................................................... 207
Contents x Chapter 4 Photosynthesis.................................................................................................................. 215 Light................................................................................................................................. 215 Photosynthesis................................................................................................................. 218 Light-Dependent Reactions....................................................................................... 219 PSII and PSI: Structure, Function, and Organization........................................227 ATP—Synthase.....................................................................................................229 ETC Components.................................................................................................. 230 Electron Transport: The Z-Scheme..................................................................... 231 Proton Transport: Mechanism of Photosynthetic Phosphorylation................. 232 Pigment Distribution in PSII and PSI Super-Complexes of Algal Division.................................................................................................. 234 Light-Independent Reactions..................................................................................... 235 RuBisCO................................................................................................................ 235 Calvin Benson Bassham Cycle............................................................................ 241
Carboxylation................................................................................................... 242 Reduction..........................................................................................................242 Regeneration.................................................................................................... 242 Photorespiration.................................................................................................... 242 The Photosynthesis-Irradiance Response Curve (P-vs-E Curve)............................... 243 Photoacclimation....................................................................................................... 246 Photosynthesis in Light-Limited Environments........................................................... 247 The Energy Relationships in Photosynthesis: The Balance Sheet............................. 251 Chapter 5 Culturing......................................................................................................................... 257 Collection, Storage, and Preservation........................................................................... 257 Culture Types............................................................................................................ 260 Culture Parameters.................................................................................................... 262 Temperature.......................................................................................................... 263
Light....................................................................................................................... 263 pH.......................................................................................................................... 263 Salinity...................................................................................................................263 Mixing.................................................................................................................. 263 Culture Vessels.......................................................................................................... 264 Media Choice and Preparation...................................................................................... 264 Freshwater Media...................................................................................................... 265 Marine Media............................................................................................................ 273 Seawater Base....................................................................................................... 273 Nutrients, Trace Metals, and Chelators................................................................... 274 Vitamins.................................................................................................................... 276 Soil Extract................................................................................................................ 277
Buffers....................................................................................................................... 277 Sterilization of Culture Materials..................................................................................284 Culture Methods............................................................................................................. 286 Microalgae................................................................................................................. 286 Batch Cultures...................................................................................................... 286 Continuous Cultures............................................................................................ 289 Semi-Continuous Cultures..................................................................................290 Commercial-Scale Cultures.................................................................................290 Outdoor Ponds.................................................................................................291
Contents x¡ Photobioreactors.............................................................................................. 293 Culture of Sessile Micro-Algae.................................................................... 296 Macroalgae................................................................................................................296 Onshore Cultivation............................................................................................ 296 Offshore Cultivation........................................................................................... 297 Nearshore Cultivation......................................................................................... 297 Integrated Multitrophic Aquaculture................................................................ 298 Quantitative Determinations of Algal Density and Growth...................................... 298 Growth Rate and Generation Time Determinations............................................. 303 Chapter 6 Utilization....................................................................................................................... 307 Human Food................................................................................................................... 308 Cyanobacteria........................................................................................................... 308 Rhodophyta............................................................................................................... 310 Ochrophy
ta—Phaeophyceae................................................................................... 315 Chlorophyta...............................................................................................................321 Animal Feed.................................................................................................................. 324 Hydrocolloids........................................................................................................... 327 Agar...................................................................................................................... 329 Alginates.............................................................................................................. 330 Carrageenan......................................................................................................... 331 Fertilizers................................................................................................................... 332 Cosmetics................................................................................................................... 335 Functional Foods and Nutraceuticals..................................................................... 336 Harmful Algal Blooms and Toxins.............................................................................. 346 Cyanophyceae........................................................................................................... 350 Prymnesiophyceae.................................................................................................... 351 Bacil
lariophyceae..................................................................................................... 35) Raphidophyceae........................................................................................................ 352 Dinophyceae ............................................................................................................ 353 Algae as Tools for Environmental Monitoring............................................................356 Flow Cytometry........................................................................................................ 356 Metagenomic Analysis.............................................................................................357 Remote Sensing........................................................................................................ 358 Digital Microscopy................................................................................................... 358 Algae as Tools for Bioremediation...............................................................................361 Heavy Metals.............................................................................................................361 Food Industry Wastewater....................................................................................... 364 Algae in a Bio-Based Economy................................................................................... 365 Algae-Based Products: Use and Market Scenarios............................................... 368 Exploitation of the Algae Potential for Different Target
Markets........................ 373 Sustainability............................................................................................................ 376 Chapter 7 Working With Light...................................................................................................... 385 How Light Behaves....................................................................................................... 385 Scattering................................................................................................................... 385 Absorption................................................................................................................. 386 Fluorescence.............................................................................................................. 387 Interference................................................................................................................ 389
xii Contents Reflection.................................................................................................................... 389 Refraction................................................................................................................... 391 Dispersion................................................................................................................... 392 Diffraction.................................................................................................................. 392 Lab Instruments............................................................................................................... 394 The Microscope.......................................................................................................... 394 Bright Field Microscopy.......................................................................................396 Steps in Establishing Köhler Illumination......................................................... 397 Numerical Aperture, Airy Disk, and Microscope Resolution.......................... 398 CCD Cameras for Optical Microscopy.............................................................. 399 Fluorescence Microscopes................................................................................... 401 Light Sources for Microscopy............................................................................. 402 Digital Microscopy.................................................................................................... 403
Hardware...............................................................................................................403 Software.................................................................................................................404 An Alternative “Simple” Method for Obtaining Algae Absorption Spectra.............................................................................................. 404 Field Instruments............................................................................................................ 406 Radiometry................................................................................................................ 408 Measurement Geometries: Solid Angles............................................................408 Radiant Energy..................................................................................................... 408 Spectral Radiant Energy...................................................................................... 408 Radiant Flux (Radiant Power)............................................................................. 409 Spectral Radiant Flux (Spectral Radiant Power)............................................... 409 Radiant Flux Density (Irradiance and Radiant Exitance)................................ 409 Spectral Radiant Flux Density............................................................................. 410 Radiance................................................................................................................ 410 Spectral
Radiance..................................................................................................410 Radiant Intensity.................................................................................................... 411 Spectral Radiant Intensity.................................................................................... 411 Photometry................................................................................................................. 411 Luminous Flux (Luminous Power)...................................................................... 412 Luminous Intensity............................................................................................... 412 Luminous Energy................................................................................................. 414 Luminous Flux Density (Illuminance and Luminous Exitance)......................414 Luminance............................................................................................................ 414 Lambertian Surfaces............................................................................................. 414 Unit Conversion.............................................................................................................. 416 Radiant and Luminous Flux (Radiant and Luminous Power)............................... 416 Irradiance (Flux Density).................................................................................... 416 Radiance................................................................................................................417
Radiant Intensity................................................................................................... 417 Luminous Intensity............................................................................................... 417 Luminance............................................................................................................ 417 Geometries..................................................................................................................417 PAR Detectors................................................................................................................ 418 Subject Index....................................................................................................................................... 421 Index...................................................................................................................................................... 433
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adam_txt |
Contents Preface.xiii Authors’ Biographies. xv Introduction. xvii Chapter 1 General Overview. 1 Definition. 1 Classification. 2 Summaries of the 12 Algal Phyla. 2 Cyanobacteria. 2 Glaucophyta. 8 Rhodophy ta. 9 Prasinodermatophyta and Chlorophyta. 11 Charophyta. 15
Haptophyta. 17 Cryptophy ta. 18 Ochrophyta. 19 Miozoa—Dinophyceae. 23 Cercozoa—Chlorarachniophyceae.26 Euglenozoa—Euglenophyceae . 26 Structure of Thallus—Cytomorphological Types.28 Unicells and Unicell Colonial Type. 28 Filamentous Type. 28 Siphonocladous Type. 28 Siphonous Type. 32 Parenchymatous and Pseudo-Parenchymatous Type. 35 Palmelloid Type. 36 Nutrition. 37
Reproduction. 38 Vegetative and Asexual Reproduction. 38 Binary Fission or Cellular Bisection. 38 Zoospores, Aplanospores, and Autospores. 38 Autocolony Formation. 38 Fragmentation. 40 Resting Stages. 40 Sexual Reproduction. 41 Haplontic or Zygotic Life Cycle. 41 Diplontic or Gametic Life Cycle. 42 Diplohaplontic or Sporic Life Cycle. 42 Occurrence and Distribution. 42 Biotic Interactions.44 Viruses.44
Bacteria. 48 Arthropods. 50 Amphibians. 51 Reptiles. 53 Other Animals and Humans. 53 vii
viii Contents Extreme Habitats. 56 Cold Environments. 56 Hot Environments. 58 Dry Environments . 60 Space.62 Endosymbiosis and the Origin of Eukaryotic Photosynthesis. 63 Chapter 2 Biogeochemical Role of Algae. 71 The Roles of Algae in Biogeochemistry.71 The Oxygen and Carbon Cycles. 72 The Nitrogen Cycle.76 The Phosphorus Cycle. 81 The Iron Cycle. 83 The Silicon Cycle.
88 The Sulfur Cycle.92 Limiting Nutrients. 94 Chapter 3 Anatomy. 101 Cytomorphology and Ultrastructure. 101 Outside the Cell. 101 Type 1—Simple Cell Membrane. 101 Type 2—Cell Surface With Additional Extracellular Material. 102 Mucilages and Sheaths. 102 Scales. 103 Frustules. 107 Cell Walls. 110 Loricas. Ill Skeletons. 112 Type 3—Cell Surface With Additional
Intracellular Material in Vesicles. 114 Type 4—Cell Surface With Additional Extracellular and Intracellular Material. 116 First Level. 119 Second Level. 119 Third Level. 121 Flagella and Associated Structures.122 Flagellar Shape and Surface Features. 123 Flagellar Scales. 123 Flagellar Hairs. 126 Flagellar Spines. 128 Internal Features. 128 Axoneme.128 Paraxial Rod.
129 Other Intra-Flagellar Accessory Structures. 130 Transition Zone. 132 Basal Bodies. 136 Root System. 138 Glaucophyta. 139
Contents ix Prasinodermatophyta, Chlorophyta, Charophyta. 139 Haptophyta. 145 Cryptophyta.145 Ochrophyta. 147 Cercozoa—Chlorarachniophyceae. 150 Miozoa—Dinophyceae. 151 Euglenozoa—Euglenophyceae. 152 How Algae Move. 154 Swimming. 154 Movements Other Than Swimming. 165 Buoyancy Control. 168 How a Flagellum Is Built: Intra-Flagellar Transport. 170 How a Flagellar Motor Works.170 How a Paraxial Rod Works. 171 The Photoreceptor
Apparatus.171 Types of Photoreceptive Systems. 173 Type 1.173 Type II. 175 Type III. 177 Photoreceptive Proteins. 177 Behavioral and Physiological Features. 180 Sampling Strategies. 181 Trajectory Control.182 Signal Transmission. 183 An Example: Photoreceptor and Photoreception in Euglena. 183 Chloroplasts. 188 Cyanobacteria.189
Glaucophyta. 189 Rhodophyta. 191 Prasinodermatophyta, Chlorophyta, Charophyta. 191 Haptophyta. 192 Cryptophyta.192 Ochrophyta. 193 Cercozoa—Chlorarachniophyceae. 194 Miozoa—Dinophyceae.195 Euglenozoa—Euglenophyceae. 197 The Nucleus, Nuclear Division, and Cytokinesis. 198 Rhodophyta. 199 Prasinodermatophyta, Chlorophyta, Charophyta. 199 Cryptophyta. 200 Miozoa—Dinophyceae. 200
Euglenozoa—Euglenophyceae. 201 Ejectile Organelles and Feeding Apparatus. 203 Prasinodermatophyta, Chlorophyta, Charophyta. 203 Haptophyta. 203 Cryptophyta. 204 Ochrophyta. 205 Cercozoa—Chlorarachiophyceae.205 Miozoa—Dinophyceae. 205 Euglenozoa—Euglenophyceae. 207
Contents x Chapter 4 Photosynthesis. 215 Light. 215 Photosynthesis. 218 Light-Dependent Reactions. 219 PSII and PSI: Structure, Function, and Organization.227 ATP—Synthase.229 ETC Components. 230 Electron Transport: The Z-Scheme. 231 Proton Transport: Mechanism of Photosynthetic Phosphorylation. 232 Pigment Distribution in PSII and PSI Super-Complexes of Algal Division. 234 Light-Independent Reactions. 235 RuBisCO. 235 Calvin Benson Bassham Cycle. 241
Carboxylation. 242 Reduction.242 Regeneration. 242 Photorespiration. 242 The Photosynthesis-Irradiance Response Curve (P-vs-E Curve). 243 Photoacclimation. 246 Photosynthesis in Light-Limited Environments. 247 The Energy Relationships in Photosynthesis: The Balance Sheet. 251 Chapter 5 Culturing. 257 Collection, Storage, and Preservation. 257 Culture Types. 260 Culture Parameters. 262 Temperature. 263
Light. 263 pH. 263 Salinity.263 Mixing. 263 Culture Vessels. 264 Media Choice and Preparation. 264 Freshwater Media. 265 Marine Media. 273 Seawater Base. 273 Nutrients, Trace Metals, and Chelators. 274 Vitamins. 276 Soil Extract. 277
Buffers. 277 Sterilization of Culture Materials.284 Culture Methods. 286 Microalgae. 286 Batch Cultures. 286 Continuous Cultures. 289 Semi-Continuous Cultures.290 Commercial-Scale Cultures.290 Outdoor Ponds.291
Contents x¡ Photobioreactors. 293 Culture of Sessile Micro-Algae. 296 Macroalgae.296 Onshore Cultivation. 296 Offshore Cultivation. 297 Nearshore Cultivation. 297 Integrated Multitrophic Aquaculture. 298 Quantitative Determinations of Algal Density and Growth. 298 Growth Rate and Generation Time Determinations. 303 Chapter 6 Utilization. 307 Human Food. 308 Cyanobacteria. 308 Rhodophyta. 310 Ochrophy
ta—Phaeophyceae. 315 Chlorophyta.321 Animal Feed. 324 Hydrocolloids. 327 Agar. 329 Alginates. 330 Carrageenan. 331 Fertilizers. 332 Cosmetics. 335 Functional Foods and Nutraceuticals. 336 Harmful Algal Blooms and Toxins. 346 Cyanophyceae. 350 Prymnesiophyceae. 351 Bacil
lariophyceae. 35) Raphidophyceae. 352 Dinophyceae . 353 Algae as Tools for Environmental Monitoring.356 Flow Cytometry. 356 Metagenomic Analysis.357 Remote Sensing. 358 Digital Microscopy. 358 Algae as Tools for Bioremediation.361 Heavy Metals.361 Food Industry Wastewater. 364 Algae in a Bio-Based Economy. 365 Algae-Based Products: Use and Market Scenarios. 368 Exploitation of the Algae Potential for Different Target
Markets. 373 Sustainability. 376 Chapter 7 Working With Light. 385 How Light Behaves. 385 Scattering. 385 Absorption. 386 Fluorescence. 387 Interference. 389
xii Contents Reflection. 389 Refraction. 391 Dispersion. 392 Diffraction. 392 Lab Instruments. 394 The Microscope. 394 Bright Field Microscopy.396 Steps in Establishing Köhler Illumination. 397 Numerical Aperture, Airy Disk, and Microscope Resolution. 398 CCD Cameras for Optical Microscopy. 399 Fluorescence Microscopes. 401 Light Sources for Microscopy. 402 Digital Microscopy. 403
Hardware.403 Software.404 An Alternative “Simple” Method for Obtaining Algae Absorption Spectra. 404 Field Instruments. 406 Radiometry. 408 Measurement Geometries: Solid Angles.408 Radiant Energy. 408 Spectral Radiant Energy. 408 Radiant Flux (Radiant Power). 409 Spectral Radiant Flux (Spectral Radiant Power). 409 Radiant Flux Density (Irradiance and Radiant Exitance). 409 Spectral Radiant Flux Density. 410 Radiance. 410 Spectral
Radiance.410 Radiant Intensity. 411 Spectral Radiant Intensity. 411 Photometry. 411 Luminous Flux (Luminous Power). 412 Luminous Intensity. 412 Luminous Energy. 414 Luminous Flux Density (Illuminance and Luminous Exitance).414 Luminance. 414 Lambertian Surfaces. 414 Unit Conversion. 416 Radiant and Luminous Flux (Radiant and Luminous Power). 416 Irradiance (Flux Density). 416 Radiance.417
Radiant Intensity. 417 Luminous Intensity. 417 Luminance. 417 Geometries.417 PAR Detectors. 418 Subject Index. 421 Index. 433 |
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author | Barsanti, Laura Gualtieri, Paolo 1952- |
author_GND | (DE-588)132466295 |
author_facet | Barsanti, Laura Gualtieri, Paolo 1952- |
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building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV048527612 |
classification_rvk | WL 2010 |
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discipline | Biologie |
discipline_str_mv | Biologie |
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id | DE-604.BV048527612 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-03T20:51:24Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T09:40:37Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781032035123 9781032035147 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-033904403 |
oclc_num | 1350175131 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-11 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-29T |
owner_facet | DE-11 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-29T |
physical | xvii, 438 Seiten Illustrationen, Diagramme |
publishDate | 2023 |
publishDateSearch | 2023 |
publishDateSort | 2023 |
publisher | CRC Press |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Barsanti, Laura Verfasser aut Algae anatomy, biochemistry, and biotechnology Laura Barsanti (Istituto di Biofisica, Pisa, Italy) and Paolo Gualtieri (Istituto di Biofisica, Pisa, Italy) Third edition Boca Raton ; London ; New York CRC Press 2023 xvii, 438 Seiten Illustrationen, Diagramme txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Algae Biotechnologie (DE-588)4069491-4 gnd rswk-swf Pflanzenanatomie (DE-588)4045543-9 gnd rswk-swf Pflanzenphysiologie (DE-588)4045580-4 gnd rswk-swf Algen (DE-588)4001173-2 gnd rswk-swf Algen (DE-588)4001173-2 s Pflanzenanatomie (DE-588)4045543-9 s Pflanzenphysiologie (DE-588)4045580-4 s Biotechnologie (DE-588)4069491-4 s DE-604 Gualtieri, Paolo 1952- Verfasser (DE-588)132466295 aut Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-1-003-18770-7 Digitalisierung UB Regensburg - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=033904403&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Barsanti, Laura Gualtieri, Paolo 1952- Algae anatomy, biochemistry, and biotechnology Algae Biotechnologie (DE-588)4069491-4 gnd Pflanzenanatomie (DE-588)4045543-9 gnd Pflanzenphysiologie (DE-588)4045580-4 gnd Algen (DE-588)4001173-2 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4069491-4 (DE-588)4045543-9 (DE-588)4045580-4 (DE-588)4001173-2 |
title | Algae anatomy, biochemistry, and biotechnology |
title_auth | Algae anatomy, biochemistry, and biotechnology |
title_exact_search | Algae anatomy, biochemistry, and biotechnology |
title_exact_search_txtP | Algae anatomy, biochemistry, and biotechnology |
title_full | Algae anatomy, biochemistry, and biotechnology Laura Barsanti (Istituto di Biofisica, Pisa, Italy) and Paolo Gualtieri (Istituto di Biofisica, Pisa, Italy) |
title_fullStr | Algae anatomy, biochemistry, and biotechnology Laura Barsanti (Istituto di Biofisica, Pisa, Italy) and Paolo Gualtieri (Istituto di Biofisica, Pisa, Italy) |
title_full_unstemmed | Algae anatomy, biochemistry, and biotechnology Laura Barsanti (Istituto di Biofisica, Pisa, Italy) and Paolo Gualtieri (Istituto di Biofisica, Pisa, Italy) |
title_short | Algae |
title_sort | algae anatomy biochemistry and biotechnology |
title_sub | anatomy, biochemistry, and biotechnology |
topic | Algae Biotechnologie (DE-588)4069491-4 gnd Pflanzenanatomie (DE-588)4045543-9 gnd Pflanzenphysiologie (DE-588)4045580-4 gnd Algen (DE-588)4001173-2 gnd |
topic_facet | Algae Biotechnologie Pflanzenanatomie Pflanzenphysiologie Algen |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=033904403&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT barsantilaura algaeanatomybiochemistryandbiotechnology AT gualtieripaolo algaeanatomybiochemistryandbiotechnology |