Basidiomycotina (2) Chromistan Fungi Eumycotan Fungi. Ascomycotina

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Basidiomycetes Characteristics: Septate mycelium
Advertisements

Mycology (Bio 594, Special Topics) M. Marshall, 2013 Shippensburg University (See last slide for additional credits) Ustilaginomycetes, The Smut fungi.
Fungal relationships with plants
Domain Eukarya Kingdom Fungi.
True Fungi break down dead organic material provide numerous drugs
Classification of Fungi. Fungi are more closely related to animals than plants: Animals and fungi have flagellate cells Animals and fungi have flagellate.
KINGDOM FUNGI.
Rusts! Smuts & Bunts! Wood & Root Rots! Rots & Damping-Off!
Kingdom Fungi (ch. 26) If at first you don’t like a fungus … Just wait a little, It will grow on you.  Mycology = study of fungi General Characteristics.
Introduction to the Fungi. Learning Objectives and Disclosure Information Upon completion of this workshop, participants should be able to: Set up a sampling.
Molecular analyses supports the division of the fungi into four phyla.
Fungi.
Kingdom Fungi Eukaryotic, cell walls made of chitin, saprophytic or parasitic and essential as decomposers.
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
Fungi & Molds Fungi Are eukaryotic heterotrophs. Frequently decomposers, sometimes parasites. Usual structure is a mass of entangled filaments called Hyphae.
Filamentous fungi - a background
KINGDOM EUMYCOTA - The True Fungi
What are fungi? Younes Rashad.
FUNGI They’re not plants! KINGDOM FUNGI # of CELLS Multicellular= many Unicellular= one.
Basidiomycota Rusts & Smuts.
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint Lectures for Biology, Seventh Edition Neil Campbell and Jane Reece.
Decomposers, Mutualists, and Killers
Kingdom Fungi All photographsin this presentation © Pearson Education or Fred M. Rhoades.
Kingdom Fungi. Eukaryotic Heterotrophs (decomposers) Cell walls made of chitin –Complex carbohydrate also found in the external skeletons of insects.
Basidiomycota. Life cycle of Basidiomycota As a group, the basidiomycota have some highly characteristic features, which separate them from other fungi.
Fungus Picture Notes.
The Kingdom Fungi.
FUNGI. What are Fungi? Eukaryotic heterotrophs Cell walls made of chitin Chitin: found in external skeletons of insects Mostly multicellular.
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Prentice Hall, Inc. Chapter 20 The Diversity of Fungi.
1 THE KINGDOM FUNGI OBJECTIVES 21.1 Identify the defining characteristics of fungi. Describe the main structures of a fungus. Explain how fungi reproduce.
Phylum :Basidiomycota.
Chapter 21 Biology – Miller • Levine
Club Fungi Section 8-4. Club Fungi  Club fungi are named for the structure that produces their sexual spores.  This structure is called a basidium which.
Basidiomycota Presented By: Jack Blaisdell. Classification Kingdom: Fungi –Subkingdom: Dikarya Phylum: Basidiomycota Under the Phylum Basidiomycota, there.
Muhammad Zeeshan Nazar
Fungi are no longer considered plants because they: 1. Reproduce by haploid spores.
The Kingdom Fungi Photo Credit: ©D. Cavagnaro/DRK Photo.
FUNGI… Is Fungi Fun????? Ridgewood High School
Fungi.
Introduction to Fungi (Mycology)
Ascomycota Powdery mildews
Lab 2 Biology Department.
Section B2: Diversity of Fungi (continued)
What is the growth form of this chytrid fungus?
Kingdom Fungi Ch. 31 Lecture Objectives Fungal Characteristics
Kingdom: fungi.
The Kingdom Fungi Photo Credit: ©D. Cavagnaro/DRK Photo.
Fungus.
Uganda 99 Black Stem Rust Yue Jin
Fungi.
Ch 19 Fungi.
Chapter 2 Lesson 1 Reproduction
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
FUNGI They’re not plants!.
EUMYCOTA: Phylum Dikaryomycotina Sub-phylum: Ascomycotina
KINGDOM EUMYCOTA - The True Fungi
Fungi Fungi are some of the most common but least visible organisms on Earth (grow underground or within organisms) We are most familiar with the reproductive.
Mushroom Lab.
Chapter 19 part II Fungi.
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
Basidiomycetes AN INTRODUCTION TO FUNGI, ALGAE AND PLANTS:
Kingdom Fungi Chapter 22.
Puccinia graminis tritici: Principal Host: Triticum aestivum
The Kingdom Fungi Ode to Mushrooms!.
Animal, Vegetable, or Mineral?
Fig
S.S.S.K.R.INNANI MAHAVIDYALAYA, KARANJA (LAD) SEMINAR TOPIC- GENERAL, VEGETATIVE AND REPRODUCTIVE CHARACTERS OF TELIOMYCETES SUBMITTED BY- YASMEEN AKHTAR.
Fungi Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About
Fungi.
Presentation transcript:

Basidiomycotina (2) Chromistan Fungi Eumycotan Fungi. Ascomycotina 1. Chytridiomycota 2. Zygomycota 3. Dikaryomycota Ascomycotina Basidiomycotina phyla sub-phyla

Basidiomycotina - main features (cf. Ascomycetes) sexual spores (basidiospores) outside basidium complex septal pores extended dikaryophase (most hyphae) multi-layered cell walls clamp connections molecular differences from ascomycetes anamorphs occur but are less important

Basidiomycotina Holobasidiomycetes (Mushrooms) B. Basidia subdivided. A. Basidia not subdivided) Holobasidiomycetes (Mushrooms) Hymenomycetes - forcible discharge of spores Gasteromycetes - not forcible B. Basidia subdivided. Phragmobasidiomycetes - jelly fungi (gelatinous fruit bodies) Teliomycetes - rust and smut pathogens - no fruit bodies

Not all mushrooms have gills. The ‘Boletes’ have pores instead.

Some important Gasteromycetes Lycoperdales - puffballs, earthstars Sclerodermatales - earthballs spores borne in large masses (gleba) often covered with thin skin Nidulariales - birds-nest fungi Phallales - stinkhorns foul smell attracts flies - disperse spores

Sclerodermatales Pisolithus tinctorius, an important ectomycorrhizal fungus. gleba

Puffballs - can be several feet in diameter Gleba - masses of spores inside

Gleba divided up into several peridioles (‘eggs’)- splashed out of cup by rain - attaches at new site and forms basidia Nidulariales - Birds’ nest fungi

Spore dispersal in Birds Nest Fungi (Cyathus)

Phallales - stinkhorns Mutinus sp. Phallus sp.

Basidiomycotina Phragmobasidiomycetes Basidia are subdivided Jelly like fruit bodies, sometimes blobs, sometimes ‘ear-shaped’ some are mycoparasites, none of economic importance

Phragmobasidiomycetes - Jelly Fungi Photo - Dr. Greg Thorn Phragmobasidiomycetes - Jelly Fungi

Basidiomycotina Teliomycetes - Rusts and Smuts Basidia are subdivided - 4 cells No fruit bodies - instead basidia formed on overwintering diploid spores (teliospores) simple septal pores Many important pathogens of crops and other plants

Teliomycetes - Rusts and Smuts Uredinales - Rust fungi obligate pathogens with complex cycles - often alternate hosts for anamorph/teleomorph localized infection special sex organs (spermatogonia/receptive hyphae) Ustilaginales - smut and bunt fungi facultative pathogens - no alternate hosts - have yeast like anamorph systemic but often form spores just in flowers no spermatogonia - any two cells can fuse

Uredinales - Rust fungi Some rusts such as Black Stem rust (Puccinia graminis) have:- 1. 5 different spore types (macrocyclic) 2. alternate hosts (heteroecious) cycles between Wheat & Barberry . 3. sub-species & physiologic races which specialize on different grass sp. and varieties. Others have fewer types of spore (microcyclic) and/or only one host (autoecious)

Puccinia graminis - black stem rust.

3 Spermagonia forming innumerable tiny haploid spermatia which ooze out in a sweet-smelling nectar. Insects are attracted by the nectar, and walk or fly from one spermagonium to another, transferring spermatia of each mating type to receptive hyphae of the other type. This process initiates the dikaryophase. The dikaryotization spreads to the lower surface of the barberry leaf and produces cup-like structures called aecia - two are shown in this section. Aeciospores (n + n)

The flower-like aecia burst through the host epidermis, and liberate dikaryotic aeciospores - but these spores can't infect the barberry - they must infect a wheat plant where they soon form uredinia (n+n) Uredinia of Puccinia sp. growing on Ribes. Red pustules give rust fungi their name.

The uredinia on wheat produce first masses of urediniospores (n+n) which rapidly spread the infection in wheat - producing more uredinia Later thick walled overwintering teliospores (2n) are produced - spores which germinate to give basidiospores (n) which infect barberry to begin cycle again.

In rusts the teliospore replaces the fruit body - germinates to produce a compartmented basidium which then produces the 4 basidiospores (often forcibly discharged)

Some other important rusts Teliomycetes - Uredinales - telial horns of Gymnosporangium on juniper (Juniperus). Aecial stage of Cronartium fusiforme - blister rust on Pinus (left). Uredinia and teliospores on Currant (right) Hemilaea vastatrix - coffee rust - wiped out coffee in Ceylon - hence now grow tea

Ustilaginales - Smut + bunt fungi Form masses of dark diploid thick-walled spores (teliospores) in flowers or fruit, leaves or stems Teliospores produce 3-4 celled basidium which buds off basidiospores (not forcibly expelled) - which bud off more sporidia Can grow saprobically as yeast-like haploid sporidia; fuse in/on host - grow systemically as dikaryotic hyphae. Several important pathogenic species e.g corn smut (Ustilago maydis); loose smut of barley(Ustilago nuda), bunt of wheat (Tilletia caries) and onion smut (Urocystis cepulae)

Ustilago maydis - corn smut. spores often replace entire cob

Loose smut, a disease of barley caused by Ustilago nuda Loose smut, a disease of barley caused by Ustilago nuda. Spores replace grains Ustilago violacea - anther smut. Systemic infection but forms spores only in anthers (replaces pollen) causes sex change in plant

Sporidia of U. violacea Fimbriae - very long protein-RNA fibrils on surface of cells (only 7nm wide)

Tilletia (Stinking Smut)

Follow-up to lecture Chap 5, text, Web and CD. know main features of Basidiomycetes and how to distinguish from other groups. Important economic species key life cycles - typical mushroom, rust, smut life cycles review terms - teliospore, sporidia, 5 spore types of rusts, heteroecious, autoecious, macrocyclic, microcyclic.