1 / 16

Fungi

Fungi . 11.1. Warm up. Identify the following figures. Specify which is a eukaryotic and which is prokaryotic. Objectives . Recognize that fungi are eukaryotic heterotrophs. Recognize mycorrhiza as a relationship between plants and fungi.

kata
Download Presentation

Fungi

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. Fungi 11.1

  2. Warm up • Identify the following figures. • Specify which is a eukaryotic and which is prokaryotic.

  3. Objectives • Recognize that fungi are eukaryotic heterotrophs. • Recognize mycorrhiza as a relationship between plants and fungi. • Differentiate between hyphae and mycelium as fungal parts. • Explain how do fungi reproduce. • Give one example of useful fungi Penicillium.

  4. Introduction • What is common between the following figures?

  5. Characteristics of fungi • Eukaryotic heterotrophs that have nucleus, rigid cell wall but no chlorophyll. • Different from other organisms. • Different sizes and shapes.

  6. Fungi for food! • Fungi are heterotrophs, but they can’t catch or surround food. • They live on or near their food supply. • Most are consumers get nutrients by secreting digestive juices onto a food source and then absorbing the dissolved food.

  7. Fungi for food! • Many fungi are decomposers, which feed on dead plants or animal matter

  8. Fungi for food! • Other fungi are parasites.

  9. Fungi for food! • Some fungi live in mutualism with other organisms. • Mycorrhiza is a mutualistic relationship between a plant and fungus.

  10. Hidden from view Fungi cells are eukaryotic, may be single cell or many cell. Many cell fungi are made up of chains of cells called hyphae

  11. Making more fungi

  12. Asexual reproduction • It can occur by two ways: 1- hyphae divide and each piece produce new fungus. 2- the cap of the fungus produces spores (sac like structures that are reproductive cells and are protected by a thick cell wall.

  13. Sexual reproduction • Special structures form to make sex cells. They join together to produce sexual spores that germinate and grow to become new fungus.

  14. Penicillium • Penicillium is used to produce important antibiotic called penicillin.

  15. Wrap up • Fungi can be consumers, decomposers, or parasites, or they can live in mutualistic relationships with other organisms. • Most fungi are made up of chains of cells called hyphae. Many hyphae join together to form a mycelium. • During sexual reproduction, sac fungi form little sacs in which sexual spores develop. • Penicillium is used to produce important antibiotic called penicillin.

  16. Assignment • SWQ2 1- 10.2 Bacteria’s role in the world 2- 10.3 Viruses 3- 11.1 Protists 4- 11.2 Kinds of Protists 5- 11.3 Fungi

More Related