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Fungi Chapter 19. 24.1 Fungal Traits and Classification  Fungi are heterotrophs that obtain nutrition from their environment by extracellular digestion.

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Presentation on theme: "Fungi Chapter 19. 24.1 Fungal Traits and Classification  Fungi are heterotrophs that obtain nutrition from their environment by extracellular digestion."— Presentation transcript:

1 Fungi Chapter 19

2 24.1 Fungal Traits and Classification  Fungi are heterotrophs that obtain nutrition from their environment by extracellular digestion Most are free-living saprobes Others live on or in other organisms  They disperse by producing fungal spores Cells or clusters of cells, often with a thick wall

3 Characteristics of Fungi  Some fungi live as single cells (yeasts)  Most are a multicelled (molds, mushrooms) Multicelled fungi grow as a mesh of branching filaments (mycelium) Each filament is one hypha

4 Ecology of Fungi  Some decompose organic wastes and remains Help recycle nutrients in ecosystems  Some form beneficial partnerships with plants, photosynthetic cells (lichen), or herbivores  Some are parasites or pathogens

5 Multicelled Fungi

6 Fig. 24-2a, p. 390

7 Major Groups of Fungi

8 24.2 The Flagellated Fungi  Chytrids are the only modern fungi with a life cycle that includes flagellated cells Some feed on organic wastes and remains Some live in guts of herbivores and help digest cellulose Some are parasites

9 24.3 Zygote Fungi and Relatives  Only zygote fungi (zygomycetes) produce a thick-walled diploid spore (zygospore) during sexual reproduction  Zygote fungi form a branching haploid mycelium on organic material, and inside living plants and animals

10 Typical Zygote Fungi  Rhizopus species Include black bread mold, molds that spoil foods, and the fungus that causes zygomycosis  Pilobolus Produces specialized spore-bearing hyphae with fluid-filled sacs that blast spores up to 2 meters

11 Microsporidians – Intracellular Parasites  Microsporidians are a subgroup that lives inside animal cells; infections can be fatal

12 Glomeromycetes – Plant Symbionts  Glomeromycetes are a related group that associate with and benefit plants

13 24.4 Sac Fungi—Ascomycetes  Sac fungi are the most diverse fungal group Some are single cells (yeasts), but in most a haploid mycelium dominates the life cycle The hyphae have cross-walls at regular intervals and often form elaborate spore-producing bodies  Sac fungi are the group that most often causes diseases in humans

14 Sexual Reproduction  Sac fungi that reproduce sexually typically form spores inside an ascus  Asci Saclike structures that form on a fruiting body (ascocarp) consisting of dikaryotic hyphae

15 Asexual Reproduction  Single-celled yeasts reproduce asexually by budding  Multicelled species reproduce asexually by formation of haploid spores (conidia) at the tips of specialized hyphae

16 Asexual Reproduction

17 Human Uses of Sac Fungi  Food and beverages Baking yeast and fermentation (Saccharomyces, Aspergillus), blue cheese (Penicillium)  Drugs Antibiotics (Penicillium, Cephalosporium) Statins (Aspergillus)  Natural herbicides and pesticides Arthrobotrys

18 A Predatory Fungus: Arthrobotrys

19 24.5 Club Fungi—Basidiomycetes  Club fungi are typically multicelled fungi in which a dikaryotic mycelium dominates the life cycle  They form sexual spores inside club-shaped cells that develop on a fruiting body (basidiocarp) composed of interwoven dikaryotic hyphae

20 Club Fungus Diversity  Club fungi make the largest and most elaborate fruiting bodies of all fungi  Club fungi are the only decomposers capable of breaking down lignin in plants and trees  Club fungi include edible mushrooms (chanterelles), poisonous mushrooms (death cap), and plant pathogens (smuts and rusts)

21 Club Fungus Diversity

22 24.6 The Fungal Symbionts  Fungi form associations with plants and with single-celled photosynthetic species Lichens Fungal endophytes Mycorrhizae

23 Lichens  Lichen Consists of a fungus and photosynthetic cells A symbiotic interaction between a sac fungus (or club fungus) and a green alga or cyanobacterium  Mutualism A symbiotic interaction that benefits both partners

24 Lichens  Lichens form multicelled bodies that may be layered, flattened, leaflike, erect or pendulous  Lichens reproduce asexually by fragmentation Fungal partner may release spores, which must contact a photosynthetic partner to grow  Lichens colonize harsh habitats (such as bedrock) but are threatened by pollution

25 Fungal Endophytes  Endophytic fungi Mostly sac fungi that reside in leaves and stems of most plants Most neither help nor harm hosts  Beneficial endophytes Produce chemicals that deter herbivores Protect hosts from pathogens

26 Mycorrhizae – The Fungus-Root  Mycorrhizae A partnership between soil fungi and tree roots Some hyphae form a dense net around roots but do not penetrate them (forest mushrooms) Some hyphae penetrate root cells (glomeromycetes)

27 Mycorrhizae Function  Hyphae of mycorrhizae grow through soil and increase the absorptive area of their partner  Both partners benefit Fungus concentrates nutrients for plant Plant supplies sugars to the fungus

28 Benefits of Mycorrhizae  Juniper seedlings without and with mycorrhizae

29 24.7 An Unloved Few  A minority of fungi are human or crop pathogens, but they have wide-reaching effects Athlete’s foot Vaginal yeast infection (Candida) Histoplasmosis Valley fever (Coccidioides) Ergotism (alkaloid poisoning, Claviceps)

30 Common Dermatophyte Diseases


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