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Kingdom: Fungi

Kingdom: Fungi. Unit 6 Lecture 4. Kingdom Fungi. aka Kingdom Mycetae eukaryotes [domain Eukarya] unicellular or multicellular heterotrophic saphrophytic mutualistic parasitic. Kingdom Fungi. immobile sexual and asexual reproduction diverse in color, location, and shape/size

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Kingdom: Fungi

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  1. Kingdom: Fungi Unit 6 Lecture 4

  2. Kingdom Fungi • aka Kingdom Mycetae • eukaryotes [domain Eukarya] • unicellular or multicellular • heterotrophic • saphrophytic • mutualistic • parasitic

  3. Kingdom Fungi • immobile • sexual and asexual reproduction • diverse in color, location, and shape/size • Amillaria mushroom in Mi • most similar in appearance to plants, but similar in DNA to animals

  4. Fungus Structure • hypha(e) – thread-likestrings of nuclei • come from spores • can be tiny to acres large • feeding system[like plant roots] • secrete enzymes to digest materials hyphae

  5. Fungus Structure • hypha(e) – thread-likestrings of nuclei • can be partitioned with septa(e) • septate / coenocytic • mycelium – group of hyphae hyphae

  6. Fungus Structure • hypha(e) – thread-likestrings of nuclei • haustorium – tip of parasitic fungi; penetrates host tissueto feed hyphae

  7. Fungus Structure • chitin – makes up cell walls of fungi • gives strength and flexibility hyphae

  8. Discuss • What is the difference between the composition of plant cell walls vs that of fungal cell walls? • What two functions can hyphae serve for a fungus?

  9. Fungus Structure pileus scales • fruiting body – grows abovethe soil; produces spores • in some types, this is the mushroom • pileus – cap • scales – make up cap hyphae

  10. Fungus Structure pileus scales lamellae • fruiting body – grows abovethe soil; produces spores • lamella(e) – gill(s) • annulus – ring • stape - stem • volva – cup annulus stape volva hyphae

  11. Economic Importance • medical applications • antibiotics • enzymes • other medicines • food applications • bread • wine • cheese • mushrooms • yogurt

  12. Harm • Though fungi can be extraordinarily beneficial to us and to the ecosystem [decomposers], they can also be harmful • plant damage – “rusts” • toxins in food • diseases

  13. Discuss • Name two beneficial uses for fungi. • Name one harmful fungus for a human. • Name the most economically important fungus.

  14. Symbiosis • Lichen • fungus + alga • most are phylum ascomycota • need light, air, water, & minerals • pioneer species • function as biological indicator

  15. Symbiosis • Mycorrhizae • fungus + plant • most are phylum zygomycota • hyphae grow through plant roots • absorb minerals for plant, plant gives fungus organic sugars and amino acids • may help with water retention

  16. Symbiosis • wood-boring beetles • other plants – orchids cannot germinate w/o fungus

  17. Discuss • What is the symbiotic partner of a • lichen? • mycorrhiza? • What does it mean that lichens function as “biological indicators”? • What other organisms can also be “indicators”?

  18. Phyla • phyla are grouped by the type of spores they create: • zygomycota • ascomycota • basidiomycota • deuteromycota

  19. Phyla • Zygomycota • sexual [zygospores] & asexual • zygospore – thick-walled hearty spores which form sexually and last through harsh conditions • coenocytic hyphae [no septa] • most are decomposers [bread mold]

  20. Phyla • Ascomycota – the sac fungi • largest & most economically important group • sexual [ascospores] & asexual • ascospore – spore which develops in sac-like structure called an ascus • ex: yeast, lichens, morels, blue/green/red/brown molds

  21. Phyla • Basidiomycota – the club fungi • most are saprobes/saphrophytes • sexual [basidiospores] & asexual • basidiospore – develop on gills of mushroom in club-shaped structures called basidia • ex: mushrooms, puffballs, shelf-fungi [on trees], bird’s nest fungi, plant rusts

  22. Phyla • Deuteromycota – the imperfect fungi • asexual reproduction only • useful in making food • cheese, jams, anything “fruit-flavored” for citric acid • ex: Penicillium spp., ringworm, blue stuff in bleu cheese

  23. Discuss • How are fungal phyla separated? • Which phylum reproduces… • using zygospores? • only asexually? • using spores in sacs? • using spores in club-shaped structures?

  24. Homework • BDOL 20.1 and BDOL 20.2 worksheet

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