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Introduction to Fungi. Fungi are no longer considered plants because they: 1. Reproduce by haploid spores. 2. Made of long filaments called hyphae 3. Have cell walls made of chitin. 4. Do not have chlorophyll
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Fungi are no longer considered plants because they: 1. Reproduce by haploid spores
2. Made of long filaments called hyphae 3. Have cell walls made of chitin
4. Do not have chlorophyll 5. Digest their food before they ingest it (Extracellular digestion, also known as absorption feeders)
Most Fungi are saprophytic, some are parasitic • Fungi grow in moist, dark, warm places
Fungi reproduce asexually by fragmentation, budding, and spore production
Most fungi also reproduce sexually Fungi are classified by the way they reproduce
There are more than 65,000 species of fungi; most are microscopic
Hyphae structure Pore Septum All other fungi True Molds
Part II: Classification There are 4 phyla of fungi
Phylum:Zygomycota Structure: many interwoven hyphae with numerous spore-bearing stalks called sporangiophores sticking up
Asexual rep: haploid spores growing on stalks Sexual rep: fusion of hyphae, develops a zygospore
Habitat: soil; baked goods; most are terrestrial; some parasitic on insects
Example 1: Cordyceps (parasitic on a grasshopper)
Example 2: Black bread mold (Rhizopus sp.)
Importance: Destroy many foods; destroy lumber; that all leads to “big bucks” wasted
1-Zygomycotalife cycle Sporangia Stolon Rhizoids Zygospore
2-Basidiomycota Gills Cap Stipe
Structure: spores on a fruiting body called a basidiocarp; spores grow on exterior surface of basidia
Asexual Reprod.: Fragmentation; Asexual basidiospores Sexual Reprod.: Hyphae fuse; fruiting body (basidiocarp) grows
Basidospores Basidia
Habitat: all terrestrial; decomposers of plants
Examples: mushrooms, shelf fungi, puffballs, stinkhorn, rusts, smuts
Importance: many edible; many are plant pathogens (corn smut, wheat rust…)
Structure: spores on a fruiting body called an ascocarp; ascospores grow in an interior sac-like structure called an ascus
Asexual Reprod.: In unicellular form (yeast) budding which is unequal mitosis. In others, asexual spores form
Sexual Reprod.: hyphae fuse, grow fruiting body (ascocarp), then, develop spores called ascospores
Ascus Ascospores
Habitat: grow on wood, soil, & other substrates; some pathogenic
Examples: Unicellular: Yeast Multicellular: Cup fungi, Truffles, Morels, Mildew
Importance: Many edible; yeast important in fermentation (big money in fermentation science)
4-Deuteromycota Conidiophore Conidiospores
Structure: many spore-bearing filaments
Reproduction: ONLY asexual reproduction; spores grow on conidia (a structure that looks like a fork); conidiospores look like strings of beads
Habitat: soil; plants; and many on animals
Examples: Penicillium sp.; Aspergillis sp.; Athletes foot and Ringworm (both types ofTinea sp.–where the name Tinactin comes from)
Importance: used to make medicines; many destroy foods; many pathogenic/parasitic on animals