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Kingdom Fungi Mushrooms, mould, and mildew Fungi in action
27

Kingdom Fungi

Feb 24, 2016

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Kingdom Fungi. Mushrooms, mould, and mildew Fungi in action. Characteristics of Fungi. In partners or as a group – what characteristics define a fungus (pl)? If you said: Eukaryotic Heterotrophic, but do not have an internal digestive system (have external digestion) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Kingdom Fungi

Kingdom Fungi

Mushrooms, mould, and mildewFungi in action

Page 2: Kingdom Fungi

Characteristics of Fungi In partners or as a group – what

characteristics define a fungus (pl)? If you said:

EukaryoticHeterotrophic, but do not have an internal

digestive system (have external digestion)Non vascular (no root system)Reproduce sexually and asexually

You’d be right!

Page 3: Kingdom Fungi

Wait...Fungi aren’t plants?Plants

Have a root system

AutotrophsCell wall

composed of cellulose

FungiNon-vascular

systemHeterotophicCell wall is

composed of chitin

Page 4: Kingdom Fungi

Structure of FungiSome fungi are

single-celled They are called

yeastsValuable

economically – can you think why?

Page 5: Kingdom Fungi

Structure of FungiMost fungi are

multi-cellularBody of a fungi

generally occurs below ground

Body = mycelium = a branching, mesh-like network of hyphae

Page 6: Kingdom Fungi

Structure of Fungi cont.An individual filament is called a

hypha (hyphae (pl))One long continuous multicellular

structure

Page 7: Kingdom Fungi

Structure of Fungi cont. So what is a

‘mushroom’?It is the spore

producing reproductive structure of a fungus, which is called the fruiting body

Made of hyphae that are densely packed together

Page 8: Kingdom Fungi

Fungal NutritionFungi release enzymes into their

surrounding Enzymes break down the food externallyFungi then absorb the nutrients that have

been released by the enzymes through its cell membrane

One way of classifying fungi is through the four different ways that they obtain nutrients

Page 9: Kingdom Fungi

Fungal Nutrition1. Parasitic

Fungi absorbs nutrients from the living cells of a host organism

Results in death of the host

Page 10: Kingdom Fungi

Fungal Nutrition2. Predatory

Soil fungi whose mycelia have specialized structures for trapping prey

Page 11: Kingdom Fungi

Fungal Nutrition3. Mutualistic

Fungi that have partnerships with other organisms (e.g. Plants, protists or animals)

Both organisms involved in the partnership benefit from the relationship

Page 12: Kingdom Fungi

Fungal Nutrition4. Saprobial

Fungi that feed on dead or decaying organic matter

i.e. They are decomposers

Very important in nutrient recycling

Page 13: Kingdom Fungi

Learning CheckWhat is mycelium and where is it

found?When you see a mushroom growing

from a dead log, which part of the fungus are you observing?

Page 14: Kingdom Fungi

Fungal Classification 5 Major Phlya

Phylum Chytridiomycota (chytrids) Phlyum Zygomycota (zygomycetes) Phylum Deuteromycota Phylum Ascomycota (ascomycetes) Phylum Basidiomycota (basidiomycetes)

Based on differences in reproduction and the structure of the fruiting body they produce

Page 15: Kingdom Fungi

Fungi Imperfecti (Deuteromycota)

Not known to reproduce sexually Generally types of moulds E.g. Penicillium mould; mould in blue

cheese

Page 16: Kingdom Fungi

Chytrids (P. Chytridomycota) Mostly unicellular Aquatic species (marine or freshwater) Spores have flagella (motile) Parasitic or saprophytes

Page 17: Kingdom Fungi

Zygospore Fungi (P. Zygomycota) Multicellular and mostly terrestrial (soil) Include familiar bread and fruit moulds Generally reproduce asexually

Page 18: Kingdom Fungi

Zygospore Fungi (P. Zygomycota) Reproduce sexually in

unfavourable conditions to produce zygospores Diploid structure (2n)

that develops after two haploid (n) hyphae of opposite types combine their nuclei. Thick wall develops around nuclei to protect it.

Page 19: Kingdom Fungi

Sac Fungi(P. Ascomycota) Largest fungi group Develop small finger-like

sacs called asci (contain spores) during sexual reproduction (similar to creation of zygospores)

Saprophyte and parasites Includes yeasts, which

reproduce by budding

Page 20: Kingdom Fungi

Club Fungi (P. Basidiomycota) Includes ‘mushrooms’,

puffballs, and stinkhorns

Most are decomposers, some form symbiotic (mutualistic) relationship with plants

E.g. lichen

Page 21: Kingdom Fungi

Club Fungi (P. Basidiomycota)

Fruiting bodies release spores called basidiospores from basidia (club-shaped hypha)

Page 22: Kingdom Fungi

Reproduction Asexual

Budding – a smaller cell develops while attached to a parent cell. Eventually, small cell is pinched off of parent cell to produce a new individual

Page 23: Kingdom Fungi

Reproduction Asexual

Fragmentation – a piece of mycelium breaks and forms a new individual

Spore production Sexual reproduction - also involves spore

production and often the creation of a fruiting body above ground

Fig3.21 (hand-out)

Page 24: Kingdom Fungi

The Importance of Fungi Fungi are:

Decomposers – one of the most important groups for recycling materials along with Bacteris

Form symbiotic relationships – esp. with plants. Without these relationships plant growth and productivity would be reduced

Food source (e.g. Blue cheese, mushrooms) and used in food production (bread, beer)

Page 25: Kingdom Fungi

The Importance of Fungi Fungi are:

Sources of antibiotics (medicine) (e.g. Penicillin). The discovery of antibiotics revolutionized health care worldwide.

Biocontrol – use fungi that target insects to control crop pests (e.g. Chinese caterpillar fungus; control of California potato beetles). This is cheaper and less damaging to the environment than using chemical pesticides

Page 26: Kingdom Fungi

The Importance of Fungi Fungi

Cause animal and plant disease (e.g. Every year 10 – 50% of world’s fruit harvest is destroyed by fungi!) (e.g. Athlete’s foot, ringworm)

Food spoilage (mould)

Page 27: Kingdom Fungi

Meet the worlds largest organism

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=strange-but-true-largest-organism-is-fungus

Honey mushrooms – give an inkling of what is below.