Chlo.ro.gloe.op'sis. Gr. masc. adj.
chloros
, green; Gr. masc. n.
gloios
, sticky substance; Gr. fem. n.
opsis
, appearance; N.L. fem. n.
Chlorogloeopsis
, resembling
Chlorogloea
(Mitra 1950).
Cyanobacteria / Subsection V / Chlorogloeopsidaceae / Chlorogloeopsis
The genus
Chlorogloeopsis
Mitra et Pandey 1967 is a coccoid‐appearing,
filamentous
cyanobacterium (Subsection V in Rippka et al., 1979). The filamentous nature of this organism is unclear, except in the hormogonia.
Hormogonia
are composed of short chains of cylindrical or barrel‐shaped cells that, after ceasing motility, enlarge to become spherical. Colonies formed by three‐dimensional cell clusters. Heterocysts develop in both
intercalary
and
terminal
positions when levels of combined nitrogen are low. Hormogonia arise from cell aggregates. Vegetative cells enlarge to form
akinetes
.
DNA G + C content (mol%)
of the three studied strains ranges between 42.1 and 43.5, and the genome sizes from 4.7 to 5.4 × 10
9
Da (Rippka and Herdman, 1992).
Type species
:
Chlorogloeopsis fritschii
(Mitra 1950) Mitra and Pandey 1967 (some resources, e.g. Hindák 2008; Halder 2016, cite the same source as published in 1966).