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FUNGI. Fungi Kingdom Characteristics. Eukaryotes. Heterotrophs Cell walls made of chitin Use spores to reproduce . Need warm, moist places to grow. Examples: yeast, molds and mushrooms. Obtaining Food. Digest food outside of their bodies then absorb it by using hyphae
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Fungi Kingdom Characteristics • Eukaryotes. • Heterotrophs • Cell walls made of chitin • Use spores to reproduce. • Need warm, moist places to grow. • Examples: yeast, molds and mushrooms.
Obtaining Food • Digest food outside of their bodies then absorb it by using hyphae • Hyphae: threadlike tubes. (Shape of fungi depends on how hyphae used) • Exception is yeast which are unicellular. AND...
How Hyphae Work! • Fungus grows hyphae into food • Hyphae secrete digestive chemicals into food • Hyphae absorb decayed food
Reproduction in Fungi • Produce thousands of spores with a protective covering (carried by water and air) • If spores land in a warm, moist place they grow.
When moisture is plentiful, fungi reproduce asexually by releasing the spores or hyphae break off and grow on their own. • Reproduce sexually by fusing of hyphae, making new spores that are different from both parents.
Since yeast is unicellular, they reproduce by budding. A well fed cell grows from the body of the mother cell and breaks off from the mother.
Four Classifications of Fungi • Threadlike - produce spores in their threadlike hyphae (ex. Bread mold) • Sac - produce spores in structures that look like sacs (ex. Yeast)
Club - produce spores in structures that look like clubs (ex. Mushrooms) • Imperfect- those that cannot reproduce sexually (ex. Penicillin)
Phylum ZygomycotaBread Mold • Hyphae include: Rhizoids (root like) and stolons (stem like) • Sexual reproduction is by conjugation (fusing) of hyphae from two different strains, followed by the production of Zygospores.
Zygomycota Sporangium: Produces the spores Sporangiophore: Holds up the sporangium
Phylum Ascomycota(Sac Fungi) Cup Fungi, Yeast, Mildews • Named for the reproductive sacs or Asci that form near the tips of the hyphae. • Ascospores formed here and released into air when the ascus ruptures. • These spores germinate to form new hyphae.
Phylum: Basidiomycota(Club Fungi) • Mushrooms, Puffballs, Shelf (Bracket) Fungi • Underground hyphae intertwine and grow upward to produce a reproductive structure called a basidiocarp = a mushroom • Basidiospores are produced on the basidia, found on the edges of the gills.
Boletes: tubes instead of gills Tubes (not gills) produce spores
Phylum Deuteromycota (Imperfect Fungi) • Athlete’s Foot, Ringworm, Penicillium • Called “imperfect” because a sexual reproductive stage has not been observed.
Lichens • Mutualistic relationship between fungi and algae • Alga provides food, fungus provides water and a physical environment/home • Can be used as an air pollution detector
The Lichens life cycle has 3 stages 1. Crustose (appears grainy)
Many Fungi are involved in Mycorhizzae (symbiotic mutualism) relationships…Over 90% of plants have fungi associated with their roots. The fungus absorbs and concentrates phosphates for delivery to the plant roots. In return, the fungus receive sugars synthesized by the plant.