1. Cyanobacteria
Earlier called blue-green algae
Modern-day cyanobacteria include some 2000
species in 150 genera and 5 orders, with a great
variety of shapes and sizes.
Ecologically, there are three major groups of
cyanobacteria in the aquatic environment.
2. o Cyanobacteria are photosynthetic prokaryotes
that capture sunlight for energy; use chlorophyll a
and various accessory pigments.
o Common in lakes, ponds, springs, wetlands,
streams, and rivers.
o Play a major role in the nitrogen, carbon, and
oxygen dynamics of many aquatic environments.
o Much of their present diversity was achieved
more than 2 billion years ago
3. Cyanobacteria terminology
- Division Cyanophyta
- Cyanobacteria ‘formerly known as’
Blue-Green Algae
- Cyano = blue
- Bacteria – acknowledges that they
are more closely related to prokaryotic
bacteria than eukaryotic algae
4. Cyanobacteria
• Cells small usually < 10μm,
• lacking nucleus, chloroplasts or other membrane bound
organelles, often with heterocysts or akinete spores.
• Blue green in colour due to a water soluble accessory
pigment (phycocyanin)
• Growth form as unicells, small clusters, filaments, or large
colonies
• photoautotrophs, aerobic
• Molecular evidence shows them to be the ancestors of
algal chloroplasts
7. Cyanobacteria
Microscopic organisms
Found in marine sediments and pelagic zone,
freshwater lakes, soils,
Live in extreme environments – chemically and
temperature.
Ecologically, there are three major groups in the
aquatic environment: mat-forming species,
bloom-formers and picocyanobacteria
8. Importance
First organisms to have two photosystems
and to produce organic material and give off
O2 as a bi-product.
Very important to the evolution of the earths’
oxidizing atmosphere.
9. Importance
Many – fix or convert atmospheric
nitrogen into usable forms through
Nitrogen Fixation when other forms are
unavailable.
As atmospheric N2 is unavailable to
most living organisms because
breaking the triple bond is difficult, the
importance of cyanobacteria.
N N
11. Forms
• Unicell – with mucilaginous envelope
• Colonies –
• Filaments – uniserate in a single row
- OR - multiserate – not TRUE branching
when trichomes are > 1 in rows
12. Features
Trichome – row of cells
Mucilaginous sheath –
layer of mucilage outside of the cell wall.
} Filament
13. Features
Mucilaginous Sheath –
Function – protects cells from drying
and involved in gliding.
Sheath is often colored:
Red = acidic
Blue = basic
Yellow/Brown = high salt
14. Features
Heterocyst – thick walled cell, hollow
looking. Larger than vegetative cells.
FUNCTION – provides the anerobic
environment for N fixation.
H- heterocyst
16. Habit – success due to ability tolerate a wide
range of conditions
• Marine – littoral and pelagic
• Fresh Water
• Hot Springs
• Terrestrial – soil flora
17. Heterocyst
• Larger than vegetative cells
• Hollow looking
• Thick walled – doesn’t allow atmospheric gas
to enter.
• Photosynthetically inactive
• No CO2 fixation or O2 evolution
• Formation of heterocysts triggered by
[molybdenum] and low [nitrogen]
18. Nitrogen
• Nitrogen is a limiting nutrient necessary
for the production of amino acids =
building blocks of life.
19. Nitrogen Fixation
• ONLY cyanobacteria and prokaryotic bacteria
can FIX nitrogen.
• Of these two only CYANOBACTERIA evolve
OXYGEN during photosynthesis
• Important because nitrogenase (enzyme
involved in fixing nitrogen) is INACTIVATED
by O2.
20. Mechanisms to Separate
Nitrogenase from Oxygen
• Heterocyst (spatial)
OR
• Fix Nitrogen in the DARK but not LIGHT –
found in non- heterocystic cyanobacteria
(temporal)
21. AEROBIC
CO2 + H2O ----------- CH2O (sugar) +O2
Electrons for PS1 come from PS2 which evolves
oxygen (splitting of water)
LIGHT
22. ANAEROBIC
in the presence of sulfur
2H2S + CO2 -------- CH2O +2S + H2O
H2S is the electron donor – so the reaction does not
produce oxygen.
24. Cyano toxins in Cyanobacteria
• Neurotoxins – block neuron
transmission in muscles (Anabaena,
Oscillatoria)
• Hepatotoxins – inhibit protein
phosphatase, cause liver bleeding.
Found in drinking water. (Anabaena,
Oscillatoria, Nostoc)
Eg. swimmers itch - Lygnbia
25. Movement
• No flagellae or structures to enhance
movement
A) Excrete mucilage – jet propulsion, gliding
B) Helix – fibers send waves of contraction
Spirulina
35. Asexual Reproduction
Akinete – thick walled resting spore
Function – resistant to unfavorable
environmental conditions.
Appear as larger cells in the chain and
different than heterocyst. Generally lose
buoyancy
A - akinete
H
38. Cyanobacteria photosynthesize using water as the
electron donor and produce oxygen as in algae.
A small number of strains can also use
hydrogen sulfide (H2S) and convert it to elemental
sulfur.
In general, cyanobacteria can tolerate low oxygen
conditions and concentrations of H2S that are toxic
to eukaryotic algae.
This tolerance may contribute to their ability to
survive in anoxic, eutrophic lake sediments as well
as in certain mat environments.