Gracilaria lichenoides

from The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Agar-agar \A`gar-a"gar\, n. [Ceylonese local name.]
   1. A fucus or seaweed much used in the East for soups and
      jellies; Ceylon moss ({Gracilaria lichenoides}).
      [1913 Webster]

   2. A gelatinlike substance, or a solution of it, prepared
      from certain seaweeds containing gelose (such as Ceylon
      moss, {Gracilaria lichenoides} or other seaweeds of the
      genera {Gelidium}, {Ceramium}, {Pterocladia}, and
      {Eucheuma}), and used for solidifying growth media in the
      artificial cultivation of bacteria, or as a gelling agent
      in foods; -- usually called simply {agar}, by
      abbreviation.

   Note: In composition it is predominantly a polysaccharide,
         and is not degraded by most bacteria. It thus almost
         completely replaced the earlier protein-based gelatins
         used for fixing bacterial colonies on culture plates,
         as the gelatins were often dissolved by the proteolytic
         enzymes common in bacteria.

   Syn: gelose, agar.
        [Webster 1913 Suppl.]
    

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