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Reproduction Of Fungi, Caselike Fungi & Saclike Fungi

Reproduction Of Fungi, Caselike Fungi & Saclike Fungi. By: Saad Ejaz & Omar Auda. What Are Fungi?. A eukaryotic , heterotrophic organism devoid of chlorophyll that obtains its nutrients by absorption, and reproduces by spores. What Are Spores?. Spores are reproductive cells

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Reproduction Of Fungi, Caselike Fungi & Saclike Fungi

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  1. Reproduction Of Fungi, Caselike Fungi & Saclike Fungi By: Saad Ejaz & Omar Auda

  2. What Are Fungi? • A eukaryotic, heterotrophic organism devoid of chlorophyll that obtains its nutrients by absorption, and reproduces by spores.

  3. What Are Spores? • Spores are reproductive cells • Asexual (product of mitosis) • Sexual (product of meiosis) in origin.

  4. Fungi & Reproduction • Most species in the Fungi Kingdom either produce sexually, or asexually by means of spores. • There are approx. 100,000 species of fungi. • Fungi are grouped into categories based on their pattern of sexual reproduction • These divisions are called phyla.

  5. There are 4 Structures: Zymgomycota Ascomyota Basidiomycota Caselike Structure Saclike Structure Clublike Structure Imperfect Fungi

  6. Caselike Fungi Division Zygomyota

  7. Caselike Fungi (Z Group) • Most fungi in the Zygomycota division are terrestrial saprobes. • A common fungus of this division is bread mould.

  8. Caselike Fungi: Continued • If the conditions are favourable they reproduce asexually. • They do this by first growing mycelium over the food, which then produce hyphae. • The hyphae on food can be characterized into two types, stolons, which grow on the surface of the food. And rhizoids, which grow deep into the food, and give nutrients to the fungus. • And rhizoids, which grow deep into the food, and give nutrients to the fungus.

  9. Caselike Fungi: Continued • These sporangium release spores, which with wind currents move to other food sources to start reproducing again.

  10. Caselike Fungi: Continued • If the conditions are favourable they reproduce sexually. • They develop two types of hyphae. • They are called plus and minus. • Their nuclei join together to form zygospore. • The zygospore doesn’t do anything until favourable conditions are met.

  11. Saclike Fungi Division Ascomycota

  12. Saclike Fungi (A Group) • Fungi in this division are characterized by how they form a saclike structure in reproduction.

  13. Saclike Fungi (A Group) • Fungi in this division are characterized by how they form a saclike structure in reproduction. • They produce spores that are characterized into two types. • Ascospores, which are spores, created from sexual reproduction, and are produced from an ascus or sac. • And conidia, which are spores, created from asexual reproduction, and are produced in chains at the tips of special types of hyphae.

  14. Yeast • Yeasts are a type of this division that can also reproduce sexually or asexually depending on the conditions. • They reproduce asexually when the conditions are favourable. • They do this by budding, which is the process of the yeast cell dividing its nucleus into bulges of its membrane to create other yeast cells.

  15. Yeast Continued • They reproduce sexually when the conditions aren’t favourable. • They do this by forming ascospores, which do nothing until favourable conditions are met, and can reproduce asexually.

  16. Questions • What are spores main function? • What does being a saprobe mean? • What are stolons? • When do Caselike fungi reproduce sexually? • How do yeast reproduce asexually?

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