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Haematococcus pluvialis
Haematococcus pluvialis
Haematococcus pluvialis

Wikipedia description

Haematococcus pluvialis is a freshwater species of Chlorophyta from the family Haematococcaceae. This species is well known for its high content of the strong antioxidant astaxanthin, which is important in aquaculture, and cosmetics. The high amount of astaxanthin is present in the resting cells, which are produced and rapidly accumulated when the environmental conditions become unfavorable for normal cell growth. Examples of such conditions include bright light, high salinity, and low availability of nutrients. Haematococcus pluvialis is usually found in temperate regions around the world. Their resting cysts are often responsible for the blood-red colour seen in the bottom of dried out rock pools and bird baths. This colour is caused by astaxanthin which is believed to protect the resting cysts from the detrimental effect of UV-radiation, when exposed to direct sunlight.

Scientific classification

Clade: Green Algae
Order: Volvocales
Family: Haematococcaceae
Species: Haematococcus pluvialis

Samples

Sample nameSample codeTissueRNA extractorSample providerBLASTSRA dataAssembly data
AGIO-Haematococcus_pluvialisAGIOalgal cellsM. MelkonianM. Melkonian
ODXI-Haematococcus_pluvialiODXIalgal cells (red)S. GrahamS. Graham