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Topics Ecological and economical significance What are fungi?
Ch. 29, Kingdom Fungi pp Topics Ecological and economical significance What are fungi? Structure of fungal body plan Fungal reproduction – life cycles Fungal phyla - cladogram
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Fungi - Ecological Importance
Ch. 29, Kingdom Fungi pp Fungi - Ecological Importance Most fungi are saprotrophs – i.e. decomposers – release CO2, water, mineral nutrients – nutrient recycling Degrade difficult materials such as cellulose and lignin Many fungi are symbionts (e.g. lichens, mycorrhizae, grazing animals) Many are parasites Parasitic chytrids - may have caused amphibian decline in recent years Mycorrhizae - mutualism between fungi and plant roots - seen in ~90% of all plant spp. Fungus increases surface area of roots, enables greater water, nutrient uptake (mainly P) Roots supply fungus with complex food material
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Lichens Fungus – Mostly Ascomycota, rarely Basidiomycota
Ch. 29, Kingdom Fungi p Lichens Fungus – Mostly Ascomycota, rarely Basidiomycota Photosynthesizer – Chlorophyta or Cyanobacteria
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with neither P, nor mycorrhiza No P with mycorrhiza
Ch. 29, Kingdom Fungi p Red cedar seedlings with neither P, nor mycorrhiza No P with mycorrhiza
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Economic - biological - medical importance
Ch. 29, Kingdom Fungi pp Economic - biological - medical importance Fungal enzymes – reduce wood, waste Some fungi - plant/human/animal diseases, some attack grains, aflatoxins Yeast – model organism – yeast and other fungi - wine, beer, other fermented beverages, bread and cheeses Aspergillus tamarii used to make soy sauce Some basidiomycota are directly edible, as are ascomycota such as morels and truffles Alexander Fleming - discovered penicillin - from mold Penicillium sp. Many drugs are fungal-derived – e.g. Lovastatin (cholesterol drug) Insulin, HGH, immunosuppresants
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Ch. 29, Kingdom Fungi pp Who/what are Fungi? Eukaryotic, ~100,000 species, varied in shape, mostly terrestrial Chitin + complex carbohydrates in cell wall Not photosynthetic Heterotrophs - saprobic, some parasitic Important decomposers Spores to weather difficult conditions Very hardy organisms Resistant to wide ranges of osmotic and pH conditions, and temperature
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Fungal Body Mycelium - threadlike structures - hyphae
Ch. 29, Kingdom Fungi pp Mycelium - threadlike structures - hyphae Many hyphae - coenocytic; multicellular without frequent cross walls (c) Others - septa - contain one or more nuclei (c or d)
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Fungal Reproduction Ch. 29, Kingdom Fungi p By spores - reproductive cells usually haploid, microscopic, spread by wind/water/animals - mostly asexual – sporangia – fruiting bodies – conidia – budding Sexual reproduction/cycle – pheromones – fusion of haploid hyphae – plasmogamy – dikaryotic stage – karyogamy resulting in zygote nucleus sexual sporangia
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Typical fungal life cycle
Ch. 29, Kingdom Fungi p. 600.
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Six Phyla Fruiting bodies, sexual spores, molecular data
Ch. 29, Kingdom Fungi p Six Phyla Fruiting bodies, sexual spores, molecular data – used for classification Table 29-1 Deuteromycota – Polyphyletic
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Zygomycota Rhizopus sp. bread mold No septa Bread mold – heterothallic
Ch. 29, Kingdom Fungi p Rhizopus sp. bread mold No septa Bread mold – heterothallic Opportunistic pathogen, unicellular Microsporidia
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Glomeromycota – AVM Fungi help in plant nutrition, defense and sharing
Ch. 29, Kingdom Fungi p Glomeromycota – AVM Fungi help in plant nutrition, defense and sharing info/resources with other plants
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Ascomycota Sac/cup fungi: Most yeasts (including Saccharomyces sp.)
Ch. 29, Kingdom Fungi p Ascomycota Sac/cup fungi: Most yeasts (including Saccharomyces sp.) Powdery mildew Blue-green, pink, and brown molds on food Edible morels and truffles Dutch elm, chestnut blight
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Basidiomycota Club fungi Common mushrooms (include Agaricus sp.),
Ch. 29, Kingdom Fungi p Basidiomycota Club fungi Common mushrooms (include Agaricus sp.), bracket fungi Basidiocarp = stalk and cup (of mushroom)
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