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He looked down at his Pasechnik workbook. The drawing of the Chlamydomonas was still there, but it didn't look like a lopsided potato anymore. He picked up his green colored pencil and carefully shaded the chromatophore, adding the two tiny flagella with a steady hand. Underneath, in his best handwriting, he wrote: Algae: The invisible foundation of life.
"You're... you're a unicellular green alga," Artyom whispered.
With a splash, they were inside the water glass. Artyom felt weightless. All around him, thousands of different algae were dancing. He saw long, elegant strands of Spirogyra that looked like emerald necklaces draped through the water. He saw tiny diatoms that sparkled like diamonds in the sunlight. rabochaia tetrad po biologii 6 klass pasechnik vodorosli
"I am a Chlamydomonas, thank you very much," the creature replied, spinning in a circle. "And your drawing is terrible. I look like a lopsided potato. If you want to pass Pasechnik’s lesson, you need to understand that I’m not just a green blob. I’m a sun-eating machine!"
Artyom froze. Sitting right on the line where he was supposed to write "Cell Wall" was a microscopic creature, glowing with a bright emerald light. It looked exactly like the diagram in Pasechnik’s book, but it was moving. It had two whip-like tails that it flicked back and forth like a frustrated cat. He looked down at his Pasechnik workbook
"We are the lungs of the planet," the Chlamydomonas said, its red light-sensitive eye-spot glowing. "While you humans are busy walking around, we are here absorbing the sun and giving you the oxygen you breathe. Look at my chromatophore!"
"Come on," the alga chirped. "I'll show you what we really do." Underneath, in his best handwriting, he wrote: Algae:
Suddenly, a tiny, high-pitched voice bubbled up from the page.