Spinoclosterium is a genus of green algae, specifically of the Closteriaceae.See the NCBI webpage on Spinoclosterium. Data extracted from the It is rare, but widely distributed in freshwater regions throughout the world.
With its crescent-shaped cells, Spinoclosterium is similar to its sister genus Closterium, but is easily distinguished by the tips of the cells bearing a spine.
Sexual reproduction is anisogamous, with male and female gametes. Cells reproduce sexually by conjugating. The female cell lies next to the male cell and the two form a tube between them. The protoplast of the male cell shrinks inside and moves through the tube into the female cell, forming a zygote. The zygote matures into a full zygospore after a few days; the zygospore is irregularly ellipsoid in shape.
When the zygospore germinates, it releases its contents and meiosis occurs, of which two of the four meiotic producte survive and the other two are aborted. The post-meiotic cells (called two gones) form an additional cell wall, and finally the each gone divides into two asymmetrical juvenile cells, releasing the cells by gelatinization of the double cell wall.
Reproduction
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