1 / 38

Chapter 31

Chapter 31. Fungi. Overview: Mighty Mushrooms. Fungi are diverse and widespread They are essential for the well-being of most terrestrial ecosystems because they break down organic material and recycle vital nutrients. Concept 31.1: Fungi are heterotrophs that feed by absorption.

johnda
Download Presentation

Chapter 31

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 31 Fungi

  2. Overview: Mighty Mushrooms • Fungi are diverse and widespread • They are essential for the well-being of most terrestrial ecosystems because they break down organic material and recycle vital nutrients

  3. Concept 31.1: Fungi are heterotrophs that feed by absorption • Despite their diversity, fungi share key traits, most importantly the way in which they derive nutrition • Fungi are heterotrophs and absorb nutrients from outside of their body • Fungi use enzymes to break down a large variety of complex molecules into smaller organic compounds • The versatility of these enzymes contributes to fungi’s ecological success • Fungi exhibit diverse lifestyles: • Decomposers • Parasites • Mutualists

  4. Body Structure • The most common body structures are multicellular filaments and single cells (yeasts) • Some species grow as either filaments or yeasts; others grow as both

  5. Fungal Morphology • The morphology of multicellular fungi enhances their ability to absorb nutrients • Fungi consist of mycelia, networks of branched hyphaeadapted for absorption • Most fungi have cell walls made of chitin

  6. Fig. 31-2 Reproductive structure Hyphae Spore-producing structures 20 µm Mycelium

  7. Some fungi have hyphae divided into cells by septa, with pores allowing cell-to-cell movement of organelles • Coenocytic fungilack septa cell wall septum pore nucleus (b) Coenocytic hypha (a) Septate hypha

  8. Specialized Hyphae in Mycorrhizal Fungi • Some unique fungi have specialized hyphae called haustoriathat allow them to penetrate the tissues of their host and extract nutrients hypha plant cell wall haustorium plant cell plasma membrane modified portions of the hyphae can constrict arround a nematode in less than a second

  9. Mycorrhizaeare mutually beneficial relationships between fungi and plant roots • Ectomycorrhizal fungiform sheaths of hyphae over a root and also grow into the extracellular spaces of the root cortex • Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungiextend hyphae through the cell walls of root cells and into tubes formed by invagination of the root cell membrane

  10. Concept 31.2: Fungi produce spores through sexual or asexual life cycles • Fungi propagate themselves by producing vast numbers of spores, either sexually or asexually • Fungi can produce spores from different types of life cycles

  11. Fig. 31-5-3 Generalized Cycle of Fungi although the cells fuse the nuclei don't; it is said to be dikaryotic Key Heterokaryotic stage Haploid (n)- most of the life cycle Heterokaryotic (unfused nuclei from different parents) PLASMOGAMY (fusion of cytoplasm) different hypha attracted by pheromones fuse Diploid (2n) from hours to centuries can go by before this takes effect KARYOGAMY (fusion of nuclei) Spore-producing structures Zygote SEXUAL REPRODUCTION Spores ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION 1.Mycelium Mitosis MEIOSIS GERMINATION GERMINATION Spores

  12. Other fungi that can reproduce asexually are yeasts, which inhabit moist environments • Instead of producing spores, yeasts reproduce asexually by simple cell division and the pinching of “bud cells” from a parent cell bud parent cell

  13. Many molds and yeasts have no known sexual stage • Mycologists have traditionally called these deuteromycetes, or imperfect fungi

  14. Concept 31.3: The ancestor of fungi was an aquatic, single-celled, flagellated protist • Fungi and animals are more closely related to each other than they are to plants or other eukaryotes • Fungi, animals, and their protistan relatives form the opisthokontsclade • DNA evidence suggests that fungi are most closely related to unicellular nucleariidswhile animals are most closely related to unicellular choanoflagellates

  15. Fig. 31-8 Animals (and their close protistan relatives) UNICELLULAR, FLAGELLATED ANCESTOR Nucleariids Opisthokonts Chytrids Fungi Other fungi

  16. This suggests that fungi and animals evolved from a common flagellated unicellular ancestor and multicellularity arose separately in the two groups • The oldest undisputed fossils of fungi are only about 460 million years old Fossil fungal hyphae and spores from the Ordovician period (~460 mya)

  17. Are Microsporidia Closely Related to Fungi? • Microsporidia are unicellular parasites of animals and protists • They have tiny organelles derived from mitochondria but not conventional mitochondria • Molecular comparisons indicate they may be closely related to fungi host cell nucleus developing microsporidian spore

  18. The Move to Land • Fungi were among the earliest colonizers of land and probably formed mutualistic relationships with early land plants

  19. Concept 31.4: Fungi have radiated into a diverse set of lineages • Molecular analyses have helped clarify evolutionary relationships among fungal groups, although areas of uncertainty remain Chytrids Zygomycetes Glomeromycetes Ascomycetes Basidiomycetes

  20. Fig. 31-11a • Chytridsphylum Chytridiomycota • Found in freshwater and terrestrial habitats • Decomposers, parasites, or mutualists • According to molecular evidence chytrids diverged in early evolution • Chytrids are unique among fungi in having flagellated spores, zoospores • Molecular data indicate that some “chytrids” are actually more closely related to another fungal group, the zygomycetes; chytrids are a paraphyletic group Chytrids (1,000 species) 1,000 species hyphae zoospore

  21. Fig. 31-11b Zygomycetes(phylum Zygomycota, zygo=egg) exhibit great diversity of life histories They include fast-growing molds, parasites, and commensal symbionts The zygomycetes are named for their sexually produced zygosporangia which are resistant to freezing and drying, can survive unfavorable conditions Zygomycetes (1,000 species) 1,000 species sporebearing hypha • The life cycle of black bread mold (Rhizopus stolonifer) is fairly typical of the phylum

  22. Fig. 31-13-4 hyphal extensions enclosing haploid nuclei meat Key 1.mycella of different mating types (+) and (-) mate Haploid (n) Heterokaryotic (n + n) Diploid (2n) zygosporangium forms containing multiple haploid nuclei from both parents PLASMOGAMY Mating type (+) Gametangia with haploid nuclei Mating type (–) 100 µm Young zygosporangium (heterokaryotic) Rhizopus growing on bread SEXUAL REPRODUCTION sporangia produces identical haploid spores Dispersal and germination Zygosporangium KARYOGAMY Sporangia tough wall is developed to protect the zygosporangium Spores Diploid nuclei Sporangium ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION when conditions are favorable, karyogamy occurs MEIOSIS Dispersal and germination Life Cycle of Zygomycete Mycelium 50 µm

  23. Fig. 31-11c The glomeromycetes(phylum Glomeromycota, glomero= round) were once considered zygomycetes They are now classified in a separate clade Glomeromycetes form arbuscular mycorrhizae Fungal hypha 160 species plant root mycelum

  24. Fig. 31-11d Ascomycetes(phylumAscomycota, asca=sac) live in marine, freshwater, and terrestrial habitats; include plant pathogens, decomposers, and symbionts The phylum is defined by production of sexual spores in saclike asci, contained in fruiting bodies called ascocarps Commonly called sac fungi ascomycetes vary in size and complexity from unicellular yeasts to elaborate cup fungi and morels Asexual spores called conidiaare not formed inside sporangia; they are produced asexually at the tips of specialized hyphae called conidiophores Ascomycetes (65,000 species) 65,000 species ascocarp

  25. Fig. 31-17-4 specialized hyphae fuse Conidia; mating type (–) Key 1.pigmented haploid spores known as conidia are produced Haploid (n) Dikaryotic (n + n) Diploid (2n) conidia (n) Dispersal Germination Mating type (+) after plasmogamy dikaryotic asci are produced ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION Hypha PLASMOGAMY Ascus (dikaryotic) Conidiophore Dikaryotic hyphae Mycelia Mycelium SEXUAL REPRODUCTION Germination KARYOGAMY ascospores are discharged through an opening, new mycelia will be generated Dispersal Diploid nucleus (zygote) Eight ascospores Asci Ascocarp karyogamy occurs within each ascus producing 2n nucleus Four haploid nuclei MEIOSIS each haploid nucleus divides once by mitosis yealding 8 nuclei, cell walls develop forming the 8 spores Life Cycle of the Ascomycete Neurospora crassa

  26. Fig. 31-11e Basidomycetes(phylum Basidiomycota, basidia= little pedestal) include mushrooms, puffballs, shelf fungi Mutualists, and plant parasites The phylum is defined by a clublike structure called a basidium, a transient diploid stage in the life cycle The basidiomycetes are also called club fungi Basidiomycetes (30,000 species) 30,000 species

  27. Fig. 31-18a Maiden veil fungus (Dictyphora), a fungus with an odor like rotting meat

  28. Fig. 31-19-4 1.2 haploid mycelia undergo plasmogamy Dikaryotic mycelium PLASMOGAMY Mating type (–) environmental cues induce the growth of basidiocarp Mating type (+) Gills lined with basidia Haploid mycelia SEXUAL REPRODUCTION Basidiocarp (n+n) Dispersal and germination Basidiospores (n) Basidium with four basidiospores Basidia (n+n) Basidium Basidium KARYOGAMY MEIOSIS Key karyogamy produces diploid nucleus which will undergo meiosis Haploid (n) Dikaryotic (n+n) Diploid nuclei Diploid (2n) 1 µm basidiospore product of meiosis

  29. Fig. 31-20

  30. Concept 31.5: Fungi play key roles in nutrient cycling, ecological interactions, and human welfare • Fungi interact with other organisms in many ways • Fungi are efficient decomposers • They perform essential recycling of chemical elements between the living and nonliving world • Fungi form mutualistic relationships with plants, algae, cyanobacteria, and animals • All of these relationships have profound ecological effects

  31. Fungus-Plant Mutualisms • Mycorrhizae are enormously important in natural ecosystems and agriculture • Plants harbor harmless symbiotic endophytesthat live inside leaves or other plant parts • Endophytes make toxins that deter herbivores and defend against pathogens

  32. Fungus-Animal Symbioses • Some fungi share their digestive services with animals • These fungi help break down plant material in the guts of cows and other grazing mammals • Many species of ants and termites use the digestive power of fungi by raising them in “farms”

  33. Lichens • A lichenis a symbiotic association between a photosynthetic microorganism and a fungus in which millions of photosynthetic cells are held in a mass of fungal hyphae crustose lichen fruticose lichen foliose lichen

  34. The fungal component of a lichen is most often an ascomycete • Algae or cyanobacteria occupy an inner layer below the lichen surface ascocarp soredia algal layer hyphae

  35. The fungi of lichens can reproduce sexually and asexually • Asexual reproduction is by fragmentation or the formation of soredia, small clusters of hyphae with embedded algae • Lichens are important pioneers on new rock and soil surfaces • Lichens are sensitive to pollution, and their death can be a warning that air quality is deteriorating

  36. Fungi as Pathogens • About 30% of known fungal species are parasites or pathogens, mostly on or in plants • Some fungi that attack food crops are toxic to humans • Animals are much less susceptible to parasitic fungi than are plants • The general term for a fungal infection in animals is mycosis

  37. Fig. 31-25 (b) Tar spot fungus on maple leaves (a) Corn smut on corn (c) Ergots on rye

  38. Practical Uses of Fungi • Humans eat many fungi and use others to make cheeses, alcoholic beverages, and bread • Some fungi are used to produce antibiotics for the treatment of bacterial infections, for example the ascomycete Penicillium • Genetic research on fungi is leading to applications in biotechnology • For example, insulin-like growth factor can be produced in the fungus Saccharomyces cerevisiae The End Staphylococcus

More Related