(N/A) $\Rightarrow$ Habitat: Algae are primarily aquatic organisms,found in both fresh water and marine environments.
$\Rightarrow$ They also occur in diverse habitats such as moist stones,soils,and wood.
$\Rightarrow$ Some algae exist in association with fungi (as lichens) and animals (e.g.,on sloth bears).
$\Rightarrow$ Structure: Algae are chlorophyll-bearing,simple,thalloid,and autotrophic organisms.
$\Rightarrow$ The form and size of algae are highly variable:
$\Rightarrow$ $Chlamydomonas$ represents unicellular microscopic forms.
$\Rightarrow$ $Volvox$ represents colonial forms.
$\Rightarrow$ $Ulothrix$ and $Spirogyra$ represent filamentous forms.
$\Rightarrow$ Some marine forms,such as kelps,form massive plant bodies.
$\Rightarrow$ Reproduction in Algae: Algae reproduce by vegetative,asexual,and sexual methods.
$\Rightarrow$ Vegetative reproduction occurs by fragmentation,where each fragment develops into a new thallus.
$\Rightarrow$ Asexual reproduction occurs through the production of different types of spores,the most common being zoospores,which are flagellated and motile.
$\Rightarrow$ Sexual reproduction involves the fusion of two gametes. These can be flagellated and similar in size (isogamous,e.g.,$Chlamydomonas$),non-flagellated but similar in size (isogamous,e.g.,$Spirogyra$),dissimilar in size (anisogamous,e.g.,some species of $Chlamydomonas$),or a large non-motile female gamete fused with a smaller motile male gamete (oogamous,e.g.,$Volvox, Fucus$).
$\Rightarrow$ Importance: Algae perform at least half of the total carbon dioxide fixation on Earth through photosynthesis and increase dissolved oxygen levels in their environment.