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Kingdom Fungi

Kingdom Fungi. Characteristics of Fungi. Fungi are eukaryotic heterotrophs that have cell walls. Their cell walls contain chitin , a complex carbohydrate. Except for yeasts, all fungi are multicellular Fungi are made up of thin filaments called hyphae

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Kingdom Fungi

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  1. Kingdom Fungi

  2. Characteristics of Fungi • Fungi are eukaryoticheterotrophs that have cell walls. • Their cell walls contain chitin, a complex carbohydrate. • Except for yeasts, all fungi are multicellular • Fungi are made up of thin filaments called hyphae • Each hypha is only one cell thick.

  3. Characteristics of Fungi • The bodies of multicellular fungi are composed of many hyphae tangled together into a thick mass called a mycelium.

  4. How do Fungi get their food? • Saprobes – secrete enzymes into dead organic matter and then absorb the nutrients from the decomposition • Ex. Mushrooms/ bread mold • Parasites – secrete enzymes onto things that are alive and absorb nutrients from the host • Ex. Ringworm/ “Athlete’s Foot”

  5. How do Fungi Reproduce? • Most fungi reproduce both asexually and sexually. • Asexually by spore formation • Sexually by the fusion of primitive gametes

  6. Structure and Function of Bread Mold • Black bread mold, Rhizopus stolonifer, is a zygomycete. (Division Zygomycota) • Black bread mold has three types of hyphae: • Rhizoids are rootlike hyphae that penetrate the bread's surface. • Stolons are stemlike hyphae that run along the surface of the bread. • Sporangiophores are strands of hyphae that support the spore case

  7. Rhizopus

  8. Rhizopus Life Cycle of a Black Bread Mold FERTILIZATION MEIOSIS Sexual Reproduction Asexual Reproduction

  9. Rhizoids = root-like hyphae The zhizoids meet underground and mating occurs between hyphae of different molds (SEXUAL REPRODUCTION)

  10. Lifecycle of a Zygomycete Fungi – Asexual then Sexual

  11. Rhizopus

  12. Rhizopus

  13. Anatomy of Rhizopus • Rhizoids – primitive roots • Stolon – hyphae “runners” • Sporangiophore – support hyphae • Sporangium – spore case • Spores – reproductive cells (asexual) • + and – hyphae – function in conjugation • Zygote – results from +/- gamtes fusing • Zygospore – protective covering

  14. Rhizopus • Hyphae from different mating types fuse and produce gamete-forming structures called + or – gametes • They fuse to form a zygote, which becomes protected by a zygospore.

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