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This species list has been generated from the Atlas of Living Australia – Locations: Explore your Area. [Extraction date: 25/07/2012. See Copyright Details and Disclaimer page for details.] This list is not complete and is subject to change.
Bacteria
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Gloeocapsa atrata
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Chromista
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Tribonema sp.
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Plants
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Trentepohlia odorata
Mougeotia sinensis
Spirogyra sp. (Vegetative group E)
Zygnema insigne
Zygnema sp.
Zygogonium ericetorum
Sirodotia suecica
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There are most likely more than just these few species of aglae living in Girraween. Many algae are single-celled organisms, too tiny to see with the naked eye. Even though they can be so very small, algae play a very important role in the park.
Water-living algae, such as the blue-green algae pictured below, produce oxygen and provide food for the many creatures that live in Girraween's creeks. Other algae that grow on bare rock, such as the red-coloured algae pictured below, break down the granite into soils that other plants can thrive in. [For more, see Biological Weathering.]
Blue-green algae are actually not plants but bacteria. Like plants, however, they create their own food using light and produce oxygen (photosynthesize).
Some algae (green and blue-green algae) have formed a symbiotic relationship with various fungi, creating the composite organisms that we know as lichens.
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Blue-green algae in Bald Rock Creek.
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Algae on rocks at The Junction.
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