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Unit 6 Part 3 Fungi
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Characteristics Eukaryotic heterotrophs Multicellular (except yeasts) Cell wall – Made of chitin
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Characteristics Digest food outside of their bodies and then absorb it – Some absorb decaying matter in the soil (saprotrophic decomposers) – Some are symbiotic (lichen, plants) – Some are parasitic – absorb nutrients from host
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Characteristics Fungi as parasites: – Plant diseases (mildew, corn smut) – Human diseases (foot fungus, yeast infections) – Other animal diseases (Cordyceps fungus)
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Fungal Disease
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Structure & Function Composed of thin filaments called Hyphae Hyphae are tangled together in a thick mass called mycelium Large surface area for absorbing nutrients
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Structure & Function Fruiting body – reproductive structure; grows from the mycelium in the soil Can have many f.b.’s emerging from same mycelium
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Structure & Function Mycelium can live for many years Over time…nutrients are depleted from soil around them…Why? Result…
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Structure & Function Fairy Rings New fungi sprout at edges of mycelium, forming rings.
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Reproduction Asexual: – Cells/hyphae break off + grown on own – Scattered spores (reproductive cell; grows into new org. through mitosis alone)
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Reproduction Sexual : – No “male/female” – Called “+” and “-” – Hyphae from + and – fuse together and produce a diploid zygote
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Classification Common Mold – Black bread mold Sac Fungi – Largest group of fungi – Includes yeasts
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Classification Club Fungi – Reproductive structures look like clubs – Extremely diverse
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