1 / 42

Kingdom Fungi

Kingdom Fungi. Eukaryotic organisms, which means they have membrane bound organelles . They have cell walls made of chitin . Mycologists study FUNGI!. Earth star. An example of Fungi You know. Kingdom Fungi. Lack chlorophyll so they feed themselves by being ___________,

Download Presentation

Kingdom Fungi

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Kingdom Fungi • Eukaryotic organisms, which means they have membrane bound organelles. • They have cell walls made of chitin. • Mycologists study FUNGI! Earth star

  2. An example of Fungi You know

  3. Kingdom Fungi Lack chlorophyll so they feed themselves by being ___________, (which live off dead organisms and recycle nutrients back into the environment) or _____________, (which live off living organisms). decomposers parasites

  4. Mushrooms – “Club Like” Fungi or Basidiomycete Fungi

  5. Bracket Fungi – Basidiomycete Fungi

  6. Bread Mold – a Zygomycete Fungi

  7. Cup Fungi – Ascomycete Fungi Note the cup shapes and orange peel color

  8. Kingdom Fungi Fungi are heterotrophs that utilize a special process called _________________ ______________ to obtain nutrients. (food is digested outside the fungal body with enzymes and then absorbed) Extracellular Digestion

  9. Kingdom Fungi – you must know 5 Major Phyla • Phylum Zygomycota = the Bread Molds • Rhizopus – black bread mold • Oomycota = the Water Molds • Water mold, potato blight, mildew • Phylum Ascomycota = the Sac Fungi • Yeast, morels, truffles • Phylum Basidiomycota = the Club Fungi • Mushrooms, puffballs, bracket fungi, rusts, smuts, toadstools • Phylum Deuteromycota = the Fungi Imperfecti

  10. Kingdom Fungi • The mycelium or body of a fungus is usually composed of filaments called a hyphae. It is seldom seen since it grows insidethe host. mycelium

  11. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2007/11/20/oprahs-favorite-things-th_n_73588.html?show_comment_id=10470383http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2007/11/20/oprahs-favorite-things-th_n_73588.html?show_comment_id=10470383

  12. Zygomycota (Rhizopus) the Common Molds -are primarily decomposers -asexual spores may be produced in sporangia -sexual reproduction occurs between + and – strains forming a 2n zygote; a zygospore develops and may lie dormant for a long period of time; meiosis occurs just before germination -only the zygote is diploid; all hyphae and asexual spores are haploid

  13. Zygomycota – common molds The fungal mass of hyphae, known as the MYCELIUM penetrates the bread and produces the fruiting bodies on top of the stalks Mycelia = a mass of hyphae or filaments

  14. Rhizoids = root-like hyphae The zhizoids meet underground and mating occurs between hyphae of different molds (SEXUAL REPRODUCTION)

  15. Water Molds -- Oomycota The water molds are better known as the MILDEWS. Fish tank fuzz is an example. Protist-like mold because share common characteristics with plant-like protists, such as the cell wall

  16. LifeCycle of Oomycota

  17. Things to Know about Oomycete Fungi • Water molds or mildews • Cause diseases such as potato blight • Cell walls made of cellulose (like plant) • Hyphae have multiple nuclei! Because the cell walls do not fully close off. • Spore swims away like a flagellate, which is why it is protist like (think of Euglena)

  18. Irish Potato Famine of 19th Century Devastated potato crops, causing devastating starvation in Ireland 

  19. Yeast is an Ascomycete Fungus

  20. spores mycelium Cap gills stalk

  21. Bracket Fungi Puff Balls Basidiomycete Fungi that all produce Basiospores Jelly Fungi Mushrooms

  22. Other Basidiomycetes Rusts and Smuts Rust infecting wheat leaves Whitrot Smut digesting old wood Rust infecting a Leaf

  23. Deuteromycota (Imperfect Fungi) -Regarded as imperfect because they exhibit no sexual stage has been observed in their life cycle -Members are not closely related and are not necessarily similar in structure or appearance; do not share a common ancestry, polyphyletic = coming from many ancestors – hmm weird 

  24. Deuteromycota – the Fungi Imperfecti • Resemble Ascomycetes, but their reproductive cycle has never been observed • Different from Ascomycetes because there is a definite lack of sexual reproduction, which is why they are called Imperfect Fungi Penicillium fungi Up Close

  25. Lichens Lichens are mutualistic symbiotic organisms. They have a fungus and a cyanobacterial portion. There are three lichen growth forms which are predominant in nature: _____________________________

  26. Fruticose Crustose Foliose

  27. LICHENS • Lichens are often the first organisms to enter a barren environment. • The bacteria contribute energy(photosynthesis)and the fungus contribute anchorage, minerals, and a home.

  28. Mycorrhizae Mycorrhizae means “fungus-root”; mutualistic relationship between plant and fungi The plant photosynthesizes while the fungus more efficiently takes up nutrients and water from the rhizosphere than the roots would alone. • Plant benefits include: • Improved nutrient/water uptake • Improved root growth • Improved plant growth and yield • Improved disease resistance • Reduced transplant shock • Reduced drought stress

  29. Harmful OR Helpful

  30. RINGWORM CORN SMUT

  31. Imperfect Fungi Athlete's Foot

  32. candida albicans

  33. YEAST Yeast are used for baking!

  34. Morels Truffles Morels and truffles used as food.

  35. Truffles are round, warty, fungi that are irregular in shape. They vary from the size of a walnut to that of a man's fist. Since the times of the Greeks and Romans these fungi have been used in Europe as delicacies, as aphrodisiacs, and as medicines. They are among the most expensive of the world's natural foods, often commanding as much as $250 to $450 per pound. Truffles are harvested in Europe with the aid of female pigs or truffle dogs, which are able to detect the strong smell of mature truffles underneath the surface of the ground. The female pig becomes excited when she sniffs a chemical that is similar to the male swine sex attractant. The use of dogs to find truffles is also and option.

  36. …and then there are the decomposers!

  37. Shelf Fungi … decomposers…

  38. Penicillium used for what???

  39. Treatments for Fungal Infections athlete's foot • Antifungal creams/powders • Keep area clean and dry (fungus grows best in moist, dark places) • Carefully clean the shower or bath using bleach. • Hot wash socks, towels, bathmats at a temperature of at least 60ºC. • Regularly wash floors where you walk bare foot. ringworm thrush

More Related