Staghorn algae
Staghorn algae ( Staghorn Algae is called Bartalgen in Germany. In the book "The Most Perfect Aquarium", the two writers showed photos, but they did not provide further proof of Bartalgen. Readers After all, we don't understand the shape of the algae. The term staghorn algae was coined by Tom Barr in 2002, mainly because this algae has a general branching shape like a stag's antlers under a microscope.
The term staghorn algae is rarely used by grasshoppers in Taiwan, but more importantly, most grasshoppers may also mistake staghorn algae for hairy algae. It turns out that even German grasshoppers sometimes know it very well. In Germany, BBA (black brush algae) is called Pinselalgen. Sometimes you can see pictures of the same algae being posted on different German websites. Interpreted as different algae. Staghorn algae and Trichophyton are both red algae, but they are not the same genus. Staghorn algae is a red algae of the genus Compsopogon sp. When Tom Barr taught grasshoppers how to distinguish two types of algae, he emphasized that as long as you see branched ones, it is Staghorn algae, and if you see unbranched ones, it is Trichophyton algae.
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