''Triparma'' is a genus of unicellular algae in the family
Triparmaceae in the order
Parmales. They form siliceous plates on the cell surface that aid in identification. ''Triparma'' is distinguished by its possession of three shield plates, three triradiate girdle plates, a triradiate girdle plate with notched ends, and a small ventral plate. It was first described by Booth & Marchant in 1987 and the holotype is ''Triparma columacea''.
''Triparma'' cells have two forms: the motile, naked form and the non-motile siliceous form. The motile cells propelled by two flagella of unequal length, typical of
heterokonts. The non-motile forms do not possess flagella but instead have a silicified cell wall with a distinctive plate morphology: three shield plates, three oblong girdle plates, a triradiate dorsal plate with rounded ends, and a large ventral plate. Both forms contain a single, dorsal chloroplast that contains
chlorophyll
Chlorophyll (also chlorophyl) is any of several related green pigments found in cyanobacteria and in the chloroplasts of algae and plants. Its name is derived from the Greek words , ("pale green") and , ("leaf"). Chlorophyll allow plants to ...
s ''a'' and ''c
1-3'' as well as
fucoxanthin. They are typically 1-2 μm in size and generally spherical or heart-shaped.
The genus ''Triparma'' is actively studied because of their close relationship to the diatoms, and it has been discovered that they have different silica-limitation responses. While diatoms stop growing and cell division is inhibited under low-silica conditions, ''Triparma'' continues to grow and divide normally even under nanomolar concentrations of silica, although the silica plates are no longer produced.
Photosynthetic pigments present in bolydophyte chloroplasts include
chlorophyll
Chlorophyll (also chlorophyl) is any of several related green pigments found in cyanobacteria and in the chloroplasts of algae and plants. Its name is derived from the Greek words , ("pale green") and , ("leaf"). Chlorophyll allow plants to ...
s a, c
1, c
2, c
3,
fucoxanthin,
diatoxanthin,
diadinoxanthin.
Synonyms
The genus now includes all species from the non-monophyletic genus ''Bolidomonas'', according to Ichinomiya ''et al'' (2016).
Taxonomy
* Class
Bolidophyceae Guillou & Chretiennot-Dinet 1999
** Order
Parmales Booth & Marchant 1987
*** Family
Triparmaceae Booth & Marchant 1988
**** Genus ''Triparma''
Booth & Marchant 1987
***** Species ''
T. columacea''
Booth 1987
***** Species ''
T. eleuthera''
Ichinomiya & Lopes dos Santos 2016
***** Species ''
T. laevis''
Booth 1987
***** Species ''
T. mediterranea''
(Guillou & Chrétiennot-Dinet) Ichinomiya & Lopes dos Santos 2016
***** Species ''
T. pacifica''
(Guillou & Chrétiennot-Dinet) Ichinomiya & Lopes dos Santos 2016
***** Species ''
T. retinervis''
Booth 1987
***** Species ''
T. strigata''
Booth 1987
***** Species ''
T. verrucosa''
Booth 1987
References
{{Taxonbar, from=Q21227150
Algae genera
Heterokont genera
Ochrophyta