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Club Fungi. David Gregorio Israel Gomez Period 8. What is Fungi?. S ingle-celled or multicellular organisms Lack chlorophyll Reproduce through spores Heterotrophs . Structure. Yeasts are single-celled. Multicellular fungi are composed of filaments called Hyphae.
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Club Fungi David Gregorio Israel Gomez Period 8
What is Fungi? Single-celled or multicellular organisms Lack chlorophyll Reproduce through spores Heterotrophs
Structure • Yeasts are single-celled. • Multicellular fungi are composed of filaments called Hyphae. • A dense mass of hyphae is calledMycelium. • Perforated walls, or Septa, divide the hyphae into cells containing nuclei.
Reproduction • When fungi reproduce Sexually, the male and female cells fuse, to produce spores inside a "fruiting body" such as a mushroom. Spores are tiny cells inside a protective coating. • When fungi reproduces Asexually, they simply make little copies of themselves. ….Yummm
Club Fungi Scientifically known as: Basidiomycota • Club fungi species reproduce sexually by forming spores on top of club-shaped structures called Basidia. • Mushrooms, toadstools, puffballs, jelly fungi, coral fungi. • Hyphae form extensive underground growths. • Consists of three parts: Stalk, Cap, Gills.
Importance Recycling: Club Fungi, together with bacteria, are responsible for most of the recycling which returns dead material to the soil in a form in which it can be reused. Food: Club Fungi are also important directly as food for humans. Many mushrooms are edible and different species are cultivated for sale worldwide. Medicines: Penicillin, perhaps the most famous of all antibiotic drugs, is derived from a common Club Fungus called Penicillium.