ThePhaeophyceaeorbrown algae(singular:alga), is a large group of mostlymarinemulticellularalgae, including manyseaweedsof colderNorthern Hemispherewaters. They play an important role in marine environments, both as food and for the habitats they form. For instanceMacrocystis, akelpof the orderLaminariales, may reach 60 m in length, and forms prominent underwaterforests. Another example isSargassum, which creates unique habitats in the tropical waters of theSargasso Sea. Many brown algae, such as members of the orderFucales, commonly grow along rocky seashores. Some members of the class are used as food for humans.
Worldwide there are about 1500–2000speciesof brown algae.[4]Some species are of sufficient commercial importance, such asAscophyllum nodosum, that they have become subjects of extensive research in their own right.[5]
Brown algae belong to a very large group, theHeterokontophyta, aeukaryoticgroup of organisms distinguished most prominently by havingchloroplastssurrounded by four membranes, suggesting an origin from a symbiotic relationship between a basal eukaryote and another eukaryotic organism. Most brown algae contain the pigmentfucoxanthin, which is responsible for the distinctive greenish-brown color that gives them their name. Brown algae are unique among heterokonts in developing into multicellular forms withdifferentiatedtissues, but they reproduce by means offlagellatedsporesandgametesthat closely resemble cells of other heterokonts. Genetic studies show their closest relatives to be theyellow-green algae.