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Published byEvangeline Spencer Modified over 8 years ago
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Kingdom Fungi
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Eukaryotic Heterotrophs (decomposers) Cell walls made of chitin –Complex carbohydrate also found in the external skeletons of insects.
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Food Digest food outside their bodies and then absorb it. –Many feed on decaying matter, others are parasites.
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Body Composition Composed of thin filaments called hyphae that are only one cell thick. Bodies composed of many hyphae tangled together into a thick mass called a mycelium that grows beneath the soil.
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Reproduction Fruiting bodies are the reproductive structures –we recognize these as a mushroom. –grow from the mycelium. Reproduce both sexually and asexually. Produce spores that allow it to spread easily.
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Fungal Structure
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Phylum Zygomycota: The Common Molds Molds that grow on meat, cheese, bread, etc. Life cycle includes a zygospore – resting spore that contains zygotes formed during sexual reproduction. Forms two types of hyphae: –Rhizoids – rootlike hyphae that anchor the fungus to the host –Stolons – stem-like hyphae that run along the surface of the host
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Phylum Ascomycota: The Sac Fungi Named for ascus – sac shaped reproductive structure that contains spores Largest phylum of the fungal kingdom Contains large fungi (cup fungi) and microscopic fungi (yeasts)
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Phylum Basidiomycota: The Club Fungi Named for the basidium – club-shaped reproductive structures that contain spores and are found on the underside of mushroom caps Include mushrooms, shelf fungi, puffballs, earthstars, jelly fungi, and plant parasites.
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Phylum Deuteromycota: The Imperfect Fungi Extremely varied phylum Contains organisms that don’t fit in the other three phyla Appear to reproduce asexually only Most common imperfect fungi: Penicillium notatum No longer a recognized phylum, but not all organisms previously classified in this phylum have been placed in other phyla
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Ecology of Fungi Considered saprobes – organisms that obtain food from decaying organic matter Can be parasitic: –C–Corn smut –M–Mildew –A–Athlete’s foot –Y–Yeast infection Can be mutualistic: –L–Lichen – relationship between fungus and green algae or cyanobacterium –M–Mychorrizae – relationship between fungus and roots of a plant
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