Title: Kingdom: Fungi
1 Kingdom Fungi
2A Mushroom walks into a bar and the bartender
says, We don't serve your kind here! and the
mushroom says, Why? I'm a Fungi!
- Mycology
- Myco- fungus
- -ology study of
3General Characteristics of Fungi
- Eukaryotic
- Decomposers the best recyclers around
- No chlorophyll non photosynthetic
- Most multicellular (hyphae) some unicellular
(yeast) - Non-motile
- Cell walls made of chitin (kite-in) instead of
cellulose like that of a plant - Are more related to animals than plant kingdom
- Lack true roots, leaves and stems
- Absorptive heterotrophs -Digest food externally
and then absorb it
4Lack of chlorophyll affects the lifestyle of
fungi
- Not dependant on light
- Can occupy dark habitats
- Can grow in any direction
- Can invade the interior of
- a substrate with
- absorptive filaments
5Structures
6Hyphae
- Body of fungus made of tiny filaments or tubes
called hyphae . - Contain cytoplasm and nuclei (more than 1)
- Each hyphae is one continuous cell
- Cell wall made of chitin
- A tangled mess of hyphae is called mycelium
- Rhizoids are root-like parts of fungi that anchor
them to the substrate (whatever they are bonding
to)
7- Mycelium increase the surface area of the fungi
to absorb more nutrients.
Figure 17.15B, C
8CLASSIFICATION OF FUNGI
- Fungi can be classified into 5 groups
- Fungi evolved from an aquatic, flagellated
ancestor
Figure 17.17A
9Chytrids
10Glomeromycetes (Mycorrhizae fungi)
11- Mycorrhizae are mutually beneficial associations
of plant roots and fungi - Common and may have enabled plants to colonize
land - Help create an extending network for the plant to
absorb more nutrients and water
12Ascomycetes (Sac fungi)
Figure 17.17D
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14Basidiomycetes (club fungi)
Figure 17.17E
15Zygomycetes (zygote fungi)
Bread Mold
Figure 17.17B, C
16Fungus Reproduction
- Fungi produce spores in both asexual and sexual
life cycles - Mushrooms let out spores from their pores that
are carried by the wind to meet other spores and
become a new fungi - Yeast are unicellular and divide into new fungal
cells (mitosis) - In some fungi, fusion of haploid hypha produces a
heterokaryotic stage containing nuclei from two
parents (fusion of cytoplasm) - After the nuclei fuse, meiosis produces haploid
spores (can grow in fungi and are the asexual
part of the life cycle)
17General Fungi Reproduction Cycles
- Video clip of reproduction
Figure 17.16
18But fungal groups do differ in their life cycles
and reproductive structures
Figure 17.18A
19Reproduction in Basidiomycetes
Figure 17.18B
20Basidiomycota (typical mushroom)
21ASCOMYCOTA
22FUNGI NUTRITION
- Fungi absorb food after digesting it outside
their bodies - Fungi are heterotrophic eukaryotes
- That digest their food externally and absorb the
nutrients
Figure 17.15A
23FUNGI NUTRITION
- Fungi use digestive enzymes to break down their
food then absorb the liquid. (acquire nutrients
such as nitrogen) - Examples
- trap nematodes (little worms who feed on fungi)
and paralyze them with special juices then
absorbs and digests the nitrogen out of them.
243 Modes of Nutrition in Fungi
- Saprophytes
- Parasites
- Mutualists (symbionts)
25Saprophytes
- Use non-living organic material
- Important scavengers in ecosystems
- Important in recycling carbon, nitrogen and
essential mineral nutrients
26Parasites
- Use organic material from living organisms,
harming them in some way - Range of hosts from single-celled diatoms to
fungi, to plants to animals to humans
27Mutualists (symbionts)
- Fungi that have a mutually beneficial
relationship with other living organisms - Mycorrhizae beneficial relationship with fungi
with plant root - More than 90 of plants in nature have a
mycorrhizal in roots (example Truffles-
expensive delicacy!) - Lichens associations of fungi with algae or
cyanobacteria - Food source for animals, breaking down rocks into
soil
28Parasitic fungi harm plants and animals
- Parasitic fungi cause 80 of plant diseases
- Can kill plants and affect crops
Figure 17.19AC
29Many fungi are harmful to humans
- Can cause human diseases allergies, athletes
foot, ringworm, yeast infection
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31Ringworm
- A contagious fungal infection having
characteristic red ring that can appear on an
infected persons skin - Can affect the scalp, the body (particularly the
groin), the feet, and the nails - Also called Tinea
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33Benefits of Fungi
- Fungi also form mutualistic relationships with
animals - Some animals benefit from the digestive abilities
of lichens
Figure 17.21
34Benefits of Fungi
- Lichens consist of fungi living mutually with
photosynthetic organisms - Lichens consist of algae or cyanobacteria
(protists or bacteria) within a fungal network
Figure 17.20A, B
35Lichens
36Benefits of Fungi
- Fungi have enormous ecological, economic and
practical uses - Ecological fungi are essential decomposers
mycorrhizae increase plant growth - Economic/Practical antibiotics and food (making
bleu cheese/ truffles and truffle hunting)
Figure 17.22A, B
37More Useful Fungi
- Yeasts baking and brewing beer
- Antibiotics penicillin cephalosporin
- Production of organic acids citric acid in Coke
- Steroids and medicines birth control pills
38- MAJOR PARTS OF A MUSHROOM
- Cap (Pileus) - The top part of the mushroom.
- Cup (Volva) - A cup-shaped structure at the base
of the mushroom. The basal cup is the remnant of
the button (the rounded, undeveloped mushroom
before the fruiting body appears). Not all
mushrooms have a cup. - Gills (Lamellae) - A series of radially arranged
(from the center) flat surfaces located on the
underside of the cap. Spores are made in the
gills. - Mycelial threads - Root-like filaments that
anchor the mushroom in the soil. - Ring (Annulus) - A skirt-like ring of tissue
circling the stem of mature mushrooms. Not all
mushrooms have a ring. - Scales - Rough patches of tissue on the surface
of the cap - Stem (Stape) - The main support of the mushroom
it is topped by the cap. Not all mushrooms have a
stem.
39Structure of a Basidiomycetes