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Chapter 30 Fungi: Recyclers, Killers, and Plant Partners

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ALL are heterotrophic organisms with absorptive nutrition ... Spores disperse and geminate to form new generation of haploid hyphae. Zygomycete Visual ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 30 Fungi: Recyclers, Killers, and Plant Partners


1
Chapter 30 Fungi Recyclers, Killers, and Plant
Partners
  • Biology 101
  • Tri-County Technical College
  • Pendleton, SC

2
Fungi Characteristics
  • ALL are heterotrophic organisms with absorptive
    nutrition
  • NO photosynthetic members of this kingdom
  • Some are saprobes that absorb nutrients from dead
    matter others are parasites that absorb
    nutrients from living hosts and some live in
    mutualism with other organisms
  • Unicellular and multicellular species

3
Characteristics, cont.
  • Cell walls (if present) possess complex
    polysaccharide chitin
  • Most fungi have complex body forms
  • All the fungi produce spores
  • asexual, sexual, or both
  • Only one phylum (Chytridioimycota) has spores or
    gametes that possess flagella

4
What a body
  • Most fungi NOT unicellular but whether they can
    be called multicellular is questionable
  • Vegetative (feeding) body of fungus called a
    mycelium
  • Mycelium composed of rapidly growing individual
    tubular filaments called hyphae (hypha)

5
Body, cont.
  • Within most hyphae, there is NO division into
    separate cells so organelles (even nuclei) can
    move around (COENOCYTIC HYPHAE)
  • May be more appropriate to call fungi
    multinucleate
  • Some hyphae are subdivided into cell-like
    compartments by incomplete cross walls called
    septa (septum)
  • Those with septa said to have SEPTATE HYPHAE

6
Fungal Body Visual
7
Body, cont.
  • Certain modified hyphae called rhizoids anchor
    members of Chytridiomycota to their substrate
  • Tubular body of fungus give it a unique
    relationship with its environment
  • Has enormous surface area-to-volume ratio which
    is marvelous adaptation to absorptive nutrition
  • Able to tolerate highly hypertonic environment
    and temperature extremes

8
Modes of Reproduction
  • Asexual reproduction takes many forms
  • production of haploid spores within sporangia
  • production of naked spores at tips of hyphae
    (condia dust)
  • Cell division by unicellular fungi (equal
    division or asymmetrical division bud)
  • Fragmentation by simple breakage of the mycelium

9
Modes, cont.
  • Sexual reproduction rather unique because often
    NO morphological distinction between male/female
    individuals/structures
  • There is genetically determined distinction
    between two or more mating types
  • Individuals of same mating type cannot mate with
    each other but can mate with different mating
    type
  • This prevents self-fertilization

10
More on the modes..yeehaw!!
  • In many fungi, zygote nuclei formed by sex
    reproduction ONLY diploid nuclei in life cycle
  • These nuclei undergo meiosis, producing haploid
    nuclei that wind up in spores
  • Haploid nuclei (either method) germinate and
    nuclei divide mitotically to produce hyphae

11
Enough on modes, already
  • Some use dikaryon stage to reproduce sexually
  • Plasmogamy, karyogamy, dikaryon, heterokaryon
  • No gamete cells, only gamete nuclei
  • These hyphae are neither 2N or N, but rather they
    are dikaryotic (N N)
  • Dikaryosis most significant genetic peculiarity
    of fungi

12
Chytridiomycota
  • Aquatic microorganisms with cells walls of chitin
  • Either parasitic or saprobic
  • Reproduce both asexually and sexually
  • Only fungi that have flagella at any life cycle
    stage
  • Allomyces is best example

13
Zygomycetes
  • Have coenocytic hyphae and produce NO motile
    cells
  • Zygote only diploid cell in life cycle
  • Rhizopus stolonifer is black bread mold (and will
    hide on the onions)
  • Can reproduce asexually and sexually

14
Ascomycetes
  • Distinguished by production of sacs called asci
    (sexual reproduction structure)
  • Septate hyphae
  • Divided into two groups on basis of asci
  • Euascomycetes (true) possess ascocarp
    (specialized fruiting structure that
    contains/protects the asci)
  • Hemiascomycetes (half) do NOT possess ascocarp

15
Ascomycetes, cont.
  • Hemiascomycetes are microscopic with many
    unicellular species
  • Saccharomyces cerevisiae (yeast)
  • Reproduce asexually by budding
  • Sexual reproduction produces ascospores
  • Euascomycetes include filamentous fungi known as
    the molds

16
Ascomycetes, III
  • Many (euascomycetes) are parasites (Chestnut
    blight/Dutch Elm disease)
  • Also includes the cup fungi morels and truffles
  • Penicillium (antibiotic/Chamembert Roquefort)
  • Asperigillus (soy sauce/sake/aflatoxins
  • Reproduce asexually by means of condia and
    sexually by a dikaryon

17
Basidiomycetes
  • Club fungi that includes puff balls, bracekt
    fungi, commercial mushrooms, some parasites, and
    some symbionts
  • Usually have septate hyphae
  • Basidium (swollen cell at tip of hyphae)
    characteristic sexual reproductive structure
  • Basidiospores contains spores
  • Some have cap (pileus) which has gills on
    underside
  • Great numbers of basidia develop on gills

18
Lets talk sex..but quietly
  • Zygomycota reproduce sexually when adjacent
    hyphae of two different mating types release
    pheromones which cause them to grown together
  • These hyphae produce gametangia that fuse to form
    zygosporangia containing zygospores
  • Zygosporangia develop thick, multilayered walls
    that protect the zygospores

19
Zygomycota, cont.
  • Highly resistant zygospores may remain dormant
    for months before their nuclei undergo meiosis
    and a sporangium sprouts
  • Sporangium contains product of meiosishaploid
    nuclei that are incorporated into spores
  • Spores disperse and geminate to form new
    generation of haploid hyphae

20
Zygomycete Visual
21
Ascomycota
  • Enough on budding already
  • Sexual reproduction includes formation of
    dikaryon
  • Nuclei from male structure on one hypha enter
    female making structure on hypha of compatible
    mating type
  • Dikaryotic ascogenous (asci-forming) hyphae
    develop from dikarytoic female mating structure

22
Ascomycota, cont.
  • Introduced nuclei divide simultaneously with host
    nuclei
  • Eventually asci form at tip of ascogenous hyphae
  • Only with formation of asci, do nuclei finally
    fuse
  • Nuclear division and meiosis of diploid nucleus
    takes place within individual asci
  • Meiotic products incorporated into ascospores
    that are ultimately released to begin new haploid
    generation

23
Basidiomycota
  • Basidiomycota are the club fungi
  • After nuclei fuse in basidium, diploid nucleus
    undergoes meiosis and four haploid nuclei are
    incorporated into haploid basidiospores which
    form on tiny stalks
  • Basidiospores typically forcibly discharged from
    basidia

24
Deuteromycota
  • Called the imperfect fungi
  • Mechanisms of sexual reproduction readily
    distinguish members of four phyla from one
    another
  • Many fungi, however, lack a sexual stage or their
    stage has NOT yet be identified
  • Fungi not yet classified in one of four phyla are
    placed together as imperfect
  • Is holding area for species whose sexual
    reproduction stage (if any) has not been
    identified

25
Mycorrhiza
  • Mycorrhiza is mutualistic relationship between
    root hairs of plant and a fungus
  • Ectomycorrhizae fungus wraps around root, gting
    surface area for absorption of water and minerals
  • Mass of fungi (like sponge) help hold water in
    area of root
  • Infected roots branch extensively and become
    swollen and club-shaped

26
Mycorrhiza, cont.
  • Endomycorrhizae infection internal to root with
    no hyphae visible on root surface
  • Fungus obtains organic compounds from plant while
    increasing absorption of water and minerals (esp.
    phosphorus) by plant
  • Fungus may provide certain growth hormones and
    protect plant from attack by microorganisms

27
Mycorrhiza, cont.
  • Been suggested this relationship ALLOWED plants
    to survive move to land
  • Plants with active mycorrhizae are deeper green
    and may resist drought and temperature extremes
    between than plants of same species with little
    or no mychorrhizae development
  • Attempts to introduce plants to new areas have
    fialed until bit of soil from native land was
    provided

28
Lichens
  • Lichen is mutualistic relationship between a
    fungus and a photosynthetic microorganism
    (cyanobacterium or green algae)
  • Are found in all sorts of exposed habitats
  • Important pioneer organisms and help in the soil
    cycle
  • Very sensitive to air pollution because they are
    unable to excrete toxic substances they absorb
  • Chattanooga, Tennessee
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