General Question

La_chica_gomela's avatar

Are seaweed and algae the same thing?

Asked by La_chica_gomela (12594points) September 9th, 2009

Sorry if that’s a dumb question. From wikipedia, it seems like they are: “Seaweed is a loose colloquial term encompassing macroscopic, multicellular, benthic marine algae.” Or is seaweed a certain kind of algae, so all seaweed is algae, but not all algae is seaweed?

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19 Answers

aphilotus's avatar

Seaweed generally refers to the leafy/mossy stuff that is attached to rocks and sways in the tide. As a term, it sometimes refers to actual marine plant-life, and sometimes to algae-cousins that are physically similar to plants but evolutionarily different (such circumstances are called convergent evolution)

Algae generally refers to the colored soupy stuff that is gunk/mold-esque, like what you might find in a swamp or a really gross pond. Most of it is single-celled goop. Call it “algae” with no capital letter.

Algae, capital A, is also a much larger grouping of “simple” forms of life, of which both “seaweed” and “algae” are members, as are Lichens and Coral.

So, Certain kinds of seaweed are Algae, some seaweed is not Algae at all. Seaweed is not “algae” (the unicellular stuff).

Also, there are a lot of kinds of algae that are not seaweed, but are still Algae.

El_Cadejo's avatar

@aphilotus you sure about coral being in that family. I mean im aware most corals host zooxanthellae algae inside of it but didnt think they were in the same grouping.

augustlan's avatar

<head asplodes>

aphilotus's avatar

@uberbatman You’re right. I always forget that Coral and Lichen are like weird algae symbionts, and not themselves algae.

El_Cadejo's avatar

@aphilotus yea, im not sure how it works with lichen, but with coral, the zooxanthellae 0-algae takes in light to photosynthesize and produce more. All the extra algae produced is used to feed the coral—(though they still do eat other foods) Its this algae that also gives coral its bright vibrant colors.—

Critter38's avatar

Corals are members of the Class Animalia, family Cnidaria…ie they aren’t plants, but they have a symbiotic relationship with unicellular algae (zooxanthellae).

Lichens consist of a symbiotic relationship between a fungus and either green algae or a cyanobacterium.

Algae may be unicellular or multicellular. When benthic, marine/or brackish water, and multicellular it is generally referred to as seaweed.

Darwin's avatar

“all seaweed is algae, but not all algae is seaweed?”

Yes.

El_Cadejo's avatar

cyanobacteria sucks…

gailcalled's avatar

Which one can you pop?

Darwin's avatar

“Which one can you pop?”

Fucus (pronounced FEW-cuss), a brown marine alga, aka “seaweed.”

El_Cadejo's avatar

you can pop bubble algae too.
horrible stuff to have in a tank

augustlan's avatar

@uberbatman It may be horrible, but it sure is pretty.

La_chica_gomela's avatar

Ok, I give in. Is “Which one can you pop?” a joke? Because I don’t get it.

El_Cadejo's avatar

@La_chica_gomela no, i believe gail was talking about the seaweed you often find at the beach that you pick up and pop like bubble wrap.

La_chica_gomela's avatar

@uberbatman: Interesting! I don’t think we have that at the beaches I go to…(mainly on the gulf of Mexico)

gailcalled's avatar

Bladderewrack. That’s it.

Darwin's avatar

Bladderwrack is one of the names for Fucus vesiculosis, so my answer still stands.

El_Cadejo's avatar

yea, i googled fucus to get that picture :P

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