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Nostoc commune is a species of cyanobacterium in the family Nostocaceae. Common names include star jelly, witch's butter, mare's eggs, fah-tsai and facai. It is the type species of the genus Nostoc and is cosmopolitan in distribution.
Description
Nostoc commune is a colonial species of cyanobacterium. It initially forms a small, hollow gelatinous globule which grows and becomes leathery, flattened and convoluted, forming a gelatinous mass with other colonies growing nearby. Inside the thin sheath are numerous unbranched hair-like structures called trichomes formed of short cells in a string. The cells are bacteria and thus have no nucleus nor internal membrane system. To multiply, they form two new cells when they divide by binary fission. Along the trichomes, larger specialist nitrogen-fixing cells called heterocysts occur between the ordinary cells. When wet, Nostoc commune is bluish-green, olive green or brown but in dry conditions it becomes an inconspicuous, crisp brownish mat.[2][3]
Distribution and habitat
Nostoc commune is found in many countries around the world. It is able to survive in extreme conditions in polar regions and arid areas. It is a terrestrial or freshwater species and forms loose clumps on soil, gravel and paved surfaces, among mosses and between cobbles.[1] In Singapore, Nostoc commune is found growing on alkaline soils, in brackish water, in paddy fields, on cliffs and on wet rocks.[2]
Biology
Nostoc commune can fix nitrogen from the atmosphere and can therefore live in locations where no nitrogenous compounds are available from the substrate. Nostoc commune contains photosynthetic pigments and the energy storing photosystems in membrane structures called thylakoids located in cytoplasm of the cells. It also contains pigments that absorb long and medium wavelength ultraviolet radiation, which enables it to survive in places with high levels of radiation.[3]
Under adverse conditions, Nostoc commune can remain dormant for an extended period of time and revive when conditions improve and water becomes available. The desiccated colony is resistant to heat and to repeated patterns of freezing and thawing and produces no oxygen while dormant.[4] It has been found that extracellular polysaccharides are vital to its stress tolerance and ability to recover.[4]
Nostoc commune can occur in pockets in the thallus of hornworts such as Phaeoceros.[1]
Uses
Nostoc commune is eaten as a salad in the Philippines and is also eaten in Indonesia, Japan and China. In Taiwan, it is nicknamed 雨來菇 yǔ lái gū (meaning "post-rain mushroom"). Nostoc commune var. flagelliforme is known as 发菜 fàcài in China which forms part of the food traditionally served at the Lunar New Year.[2] Research indicates that consumption of Nostoc commune var. sphaeroides, in addition to consumption of other cyanobacteria, may be beneficial by means of an anti-inflammatory mechanism.[5]
References
- ^ a b c d Guiry, M.D.; Guiry, G.M. (2012). "Nostoc commune - Vaucher ex Bornet & Flahault". AlgaeBase. Retrieved 2012-09-08.
- ^ a b c Wee Yeow Chin. "Nostoc commune". Raffles Museum of Biodiversity Research. Archived from the original on 2012-12-25. Retrieved 2012-09-07.
- ^ a b "Nostoc". MicrobeWiki. Retrieved 2012-09-08.
- ^ a b Tamaru, Yoshiyuki; Yayoi, Takani; Yoshida, Takayuki; Toshio, Sakamoto (2005). "Crucial Role of Extracellular Polysaccharides in Desiccation and Freezing Tolerance in the Terrestrial Cyanobacterium Nostoc commune". Applied and Environmental Microbiology. 71 (11): 7327–7333. doi:10.1128/AEM.71.11.7327-7333.2005. PMC 1287664. PMID 16269775.
- ^ Ku, Lee (2013). "Edible blue-green algae reduce the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines by inhibiting NF-κB pathway in macrophages and splenocytes". Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - General Subjects. 1830 (4): 2981–2988. doi:10.1016/j.bbagen.2013.01.018. PMC 3594481. PMID 23357040.
This article uses material from the Wikipedia article "Nostoc commune", which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0. Content may have been omitted from the original, but no content has been changed or extended.
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Computer Vision Model
Included
The current Computer Vision Model knows about this taxon, so it might be included in automated suggestions with the "Visually Similar" label.
About Interactions
Most organisms interact with other organisms in some way or another, and how they do so usually defines how they fit into an ecosystem. These interactions come to us from Global Biotic Interactions (GLoBI), a database and webservice that combines interaction data from numerous sources, including iNaturalist. You can actually contribute to this database by adding the "Eating", "Eaten by", and "Host" observation fields to observations that demonstrate those interactions.
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Names
| Language / Type | Name | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Chinese (Simplified) | 地木耳 | |
| Chinese (Simplified) | 地皮菜 | |
| Chinese (Simplified) | 地耳 | |
| Chinese (Simplified) | 地踏菜 | |
| Chinese (Simplified) | 地软 | |
| Chinese (Simplified) | 普通念珠藻 | |
| Chinese (Traditional) | 地木耳 | |
| Chinese (Traditional) | 情人的眼淚 | |
| Chinese (Traditional) | 葛仙米藻 | |
| Chinese (Traditional) | 雨來菇 | |
| Czech | jednořadka | |
| Danish | Skyfald | |
| English | Angel Snot | |
| English | Star Jelly | |
| French | Crachat de lune | |
| German | Engelsschnäutze | |
| Hawaiian | limu kā kanaka | |
| Japanese | イシクラゲ | |
| Javanese | Jamur sèlå | |
| Norwegian | glye (skyfall) | |
| Russian | Носток обыкновенный | |
| Scientific Names | Nostoc | |
| Scientific Names | Nostoc carneum | |
| Scientific Names | Nostoc commune | |
| Swedish | skyfallsalg | |
| Ukrainian | Носток звичайний |
About Names
Most categories of organisms have "common names" in spoken languages. These names are usually recognizable, easy to pronounce, and stable over time, but many organisms have several different names in different places, even in the same language, which can make it difficult to communicate about these organisms without confusion. Scientists address this problem by using a single "scienti...
Conservation Status
We have no conservation status for this taxonAbout Conservation Status
The conservation status summarizes the risk of extinction for a group of organisms. More
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Establishment Means
| Place | Establishment Means | Source List | Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| native | Oceania Check List | View | |
| native | New Zealand Check List | View | |
| native | Auckland Central Check List | View | |
| native | Auckland Isthmus Check List | View | |
| native | NEW ZEALAND AK Check List | View |
About Establishment Means
"Establishment means" describes how a species arrived where it currently occurs. Introduced means it arrived because of human activity, while native means it arrived without human assistance. Endemic species only occur in a specific place and nowhere else. More