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ASCOMYCETES (CONT.) PYRENOMYCETES I. IB 371 General Mycology Lecture 22 Tuesday November 11, 2003. ASCOMYCETES (CONT.) PYRENOMYCETES. Ascomata perithecial or sometimes cleistothecial
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ASCOMYCETES (CONT.)PYRENOMYCETES I IB 371 General Mycology Lecture 22 Tuesday November 11, 2003
ASCOMYCETES (CONT.)PYRENOMYCETES • Ascomata perithecial or sometimes cleistothecial • Ovoid to cylindrical unitunicate asci, usually formed from ascogenous hyphae and croziers in a hymenium or becoming scattered throughout the ascomata • Hamathecial tissue present or absent at maturity
PYRENOMYCETES • Asci persistent or evanescent • Ascospores usually forcibly discharged from persistent asci • Ascospores comprising a wide range of morphologies • Asexual reproduction by conidia
PYRENOMYCETES • Include numerous and important plant pathogens • Parasites and symbionts of arthropods • Saprophytes capable of degrading lignocellulose • Endophytes of a variety of plants • Mycotoxin producers • Etc.
XYLARIALES - ASCOMATA • Dark, leathery or carbonaceous • Usually a perithecium but sometimes a cleistothecium • Sometimes embedded in a stroma
XYLAIALES -ASCI • Formed in a peripheral or basal hymenial layer • Usually cylindrical, sometimes club shaped or subglobose • Usually with an apical ring surrounding a pore through which ascospores are discharged • Apical ring may be amyloid and stain blue in iodine
XYLARIALES -HAMATHECIUM • Paraphyses present - attached at base, growing upward and inward, and interspersed among the asci • Periphyses present in the beak of the perithecium
XYLARIALES -ASCOSPORES • Usually pigmented • One celled or sometimes transversely septate • With germ pores or slits • Sometimes with a gelatinous sheath
XYLARIALES -ANAMORPHS • Mostly holoblastic development with conidiogenous cells proliferating sympodially or percurrently
XYLARIALES • Remember Xylaria polymorpha – dead man’sfingers
SORDARIALES • Primarily saproprobic on plant or animal remains, dung • Ascomata rarely in a stroma • Ascomata perithecial or cleistothecial • Peridium thin or thick, transparent to darkly pigmented
SORDARIALES • Asci cylindric to club-shaped with apical pores and often some type of apical apparatus • Paraphyses may or may not be present at maturity • Ascospores various in pigmentation and septation
Sordaria fimicola • Used extensively for genetic studies • Found on dung (fimicolous) • Color mutations in ascospores used as markers in genetic studies • Beaks are positively phototrophic and direct forcibly shot ascospores away from the substrate
CHAETOMIUM • Ubiquitous • Cellulose decomposers • Mesophilic, thermotolerant, thermophilic species • Tooth paste fungus
CHAETOMIUM • Perithecia ostiolate, covered with hairs • Asci thin-walled, evanescent • Ascospores lemon-shaped w. apical or sub-apical germ pores • Conidia, when produced, chlamydospores or phialospores
Neurospora crassa • Gets its name from the nerve-like striations on the ascospores • Used extensively in genetic studies (1 gene for 1 enzyme theory - Beadle & Tatum) • Field of haploid genetics - all genotypes expressed • Lab pest - very fast growth and conidiation rate, conidia hydrophobic & easily dispersed
Halosphaeriales • Occur primarily in seawater with some species in freshwater habitats • Ascomata membranous or carbonaceous • Hamathecium absent or as catenophyses • Asci thin-walled, usually without apical structures, deliquescing to release ascospores • Ascospores modified for dispersal & attachment in aquatic habitats