Which Unicellular Green Algae Indicates Clean Water?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around identifying a specific unicellular green algae that serves as an indicator of clean water, with the clue being a seven-letter word where the second letter is 'E'. Participants mention a scientific paper that reviews various indicator algal species, suggesting that the answer may be found within it. However, there is uncertainty about whether the crossword puzzle uses a scientific or common name, leading to frustration. The original poster expresses dissatisfaction with the paper's content, indicating that it did not provide the needed information. The conversation highlights the challenges of sourcing accurate information for niche topics like this one.
physicist007
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Could anyone tell me that what is the name of the unicellular green algae which acts as an indicators of clean water.
Actually I am solving a crossword puzzle so I need assist in one question the hint to this specific algae is that it is an 7 letters long word and its second letter is E.
 
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Hmm. Somebody read a note on the internet based on third hand scientific reporting. Then put it in a crossword.

See this paper: http://cdn.intechopen.com/pdfs-wm/41950.pdf It is a review of indicator algal species. There are lots of them.
Hundreds. If you can get the first letter, it should be 'findable' in the above citation. Unless the crossword creator used a common name. If that is true, I would give up now.

This is definitely an innovative crowdsourcing kind of question. Ask the crowd that might know.
 
jim mcnamara said:
Hmm. Somebody read a note on the internet based on third hand scientific reporting. Then put it in a crossword.

See this paper: http://cdn.intechopen.com/pdfs-wm/41950.pdf It is a review of indicator algal species. There are lots of them.
Hundreds. If you can get the first letter, it should be 'findable' in the above citation. Unless the crossword creator used a common name. If that is true, I would give up now.

This is definitely an innovative crowdsourcing kind of question. Ask the crowd that might know.

I have already searched this paper, but this paper doesn't quenches my thirst. Please try something else. Well, thanks for your efforts.
 
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