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Chapter 21: Kingdom Fungi Notes

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1 Chapter 21: Kingdom Fungi Notes
Mysterious Molds, Mildews, And Mushrooms

2 What do we already know about Fungi?
From our Classification unit, we should already know many things about fungi Eukaryote or prokaryote? Unicellular or multicellular? Cell wall or not? What is it made of? Autotroph or heterotroph?

3 Fungi are in their own kingdom
*

4 Characteristics of members of the Kingdom Fungi:
Eukaryotic most are multicellular, except yeast which are unicellular have cell walls made of chitin Penicillium

5 Characteristics of members of the Kingdom Fungi:
are NOT plants because Plants are autotrophs: They use photosynthesis to make their own food (sugars) Fungi are heterotrophs: They do not make their own food and must obtain food from the organisms or materials on which they live. Fungi are decomposers.

6 How do you know that fungi in these pictures are heterotrophs?
Corn smut Bleu cheese Moldy leaf *

7 Multicellular fungi are composed of:
Thin filaments called hyphae tangled together into a mass called mycelium. 2. A fruiting body, the reproductive structure (like the part of the mushroom that you see above ground). Nuclei Cell wall Cytoplasm Cross wall Nuclei Hyphae With Cross Walls Cell wall Cytoplasm Hyphae Without Cross Walls

8 Label this in your notes!
Fruiting body Hyphae Mycelium

9 Fungi Reproduction In their life cycle, most fungi reproduce both sexually and asexually. They can produce spores that can spread (think of them like fungus seeds) and grow into a new fungus.

10 Fungal spores Bark beetle wing pit fungi Penicillium
Aspergillus fumigatus (found on pillows) Nidula niveotomentosa (Bird’s nest fungus) *

11 Types of Fungi – complete the notes for this section on the table
Common Name: Common Molds Phylum: Zygomycota Characteristics Can grow on foods such as meat, cheese, and bread. They appear fuzzy and can be different colors.

12 Types of Fungi – complete the notes for this section on the table
Characteristics: Reproduce asexually by producing haploid spores on the sporangium atop long supportive hyphae called a sporangiophore. Example: bread mold black mold bleu cheese mold Types of Fungi – complete the notes for this section on the table

13 Figure 21-5 The Life Cycle of Rhizopus
Section 21-2 Zygospore (2N) Spores (N) Sporangium + Mating type (N) Stolons Rhizoids - Mating type (N) Sporangiophore Gametangia FERTILIZATION MEIOSIS Sexual Reproduction Asexual Reproduction Diploid Haploid

14 Types of Fungi Common Name: Sac Fungi Phylum: Ascomycota
Characteristics: In a moist, warm, anaerobic (without oxygen) environment, yeast will rapidly divide and perform alcoholic fermentation. Saccharomyces in the presence of sugar will perform alcoholic fermentation converting sugar into carbon dioxide and alcohol. This is what makes bread rise (CO2 makes the “holes” in the bread, and the alcohol evaporates) and alcoholic beverages alcoholic (alcohol stays there and CO2 make beverages bubble)

15 Types of Fungi Common Name: Sac Fungi Phylum: Ascomycota Example:
yeast cup fungus

16 Figure 21-7 The Life Cycle of an Ascomycete
Section 21-2 Hypha (N) Conidiophore Conidia (N) + Mating type (N) - Mating type (N) 8 Ascospores (N) Ascus Zygote (2N) Ascus (N + N) Fruiting body (N + N) Hyphae (N + N) Gametangia Asci Hyphae (N) Diploid Haploid FERTILIZATION HYPHAE FUSE MEIOSIS Sexual Reproduction Asexual Reproduction

17 Types of Fungi Common Name: Sac Fungi Example: morels, truffles Morels
Yeast Truffles

18 Types of Fungi Common Name: Club Fungi Phylum: Basidiomycota
Characteristics: The fruiting body resembles a club, that has basidia (spore-bearing part) on the underside of the club part.

19 Figure 21-8 The Life Cycle of a Basidiomycete
Section 21-2 Fruiting body (N + N) Button Secondary mycelium (N + N) Primary mycelium (N) + Mating type (N) - Mating type (N) Basidiospores (N) Zygote (2N) Basidia (N + N) Gills lined with basidia Gills Stalk Base Cap FERTILIZATION HYPHAE FUSE Haploid Diploid MEIOSIS

20 Types of Fungi Club Fungi-
These are the ones we eat, but most are poisonous. Never pick and eat a wild mushroom, they can kill you!!! Examples: Mushrooms, puffballs

21 Poisonous Medicinal *

22 Types of Fungi Common Name: Imperfect Fungi Phylum: Deuteromycota
Characteristics: They do not appear to go through a sexual reproductive stage. *Includes all the fungi that scientists cannot place into the other phyla because they have never observed a sexual phase in the life cycle.

23 Types of Fungi Common Name: Imperfect Fungi Example: Penicillium is a mold that grows on fruit- it is the source of penicillin (an antibiotic).

24 Diverse Roles of Fungi Fungi are not all gross (like we sometimes assume) What do we already know about fungi and their niche (role in the ecosystem) What are some good fungi? What are some bad fungi? Planet Earth time:23:30

25 Diverse roles of fungi Pathogens Plant pathogens: smut and rusts
Corn smut Rust fungi Melamspora

26 Diverse roles of fungi Pathogens Animal pathogens:
Some species can kill insects and use their body as food (see page 539) Planet Earth time:27:00

27 Diverse roles of fungi Pathogens Animal pathogens:
Fungi known as dermatophytes cause athlete’s foot, jock itch, and ringworm **The fungus forms a mycelium within the outer layers of the skin.

28 Athlete’s Foot *

29 Ringworm *

30 Diverse roles of fungi Pathogens Animal pathogens:
The fungus Candida albicans causes thrush (mouth infection), diaper rash, and yeast infections in the female reproductive tract.

31 Thrush *

32 Diverse roles of fungi Decomposer: breaking down dead material & returning the organic material to the soil.

33 Diverse roles of fungi Food Source: mushrooms, bleu cheese, production of soy sauce Edible mushrooms Soy sauce

34 Diverse roles of fungi Some Poisonous: can cause destruction of cells and organ failure, neurological symptoms, and gastrointestinal irritation “Angel of Death” Amanita Muscaria

35 Diverse roles of fungi Medicinal purposes
Penicillin: toxin produced by the mold Penicillium notatum kills some bacteria by interfering with their ability to synthesize the cell wall.

36 Penicillium produces a substance that is toxic to
some bacteria- discovered by Alexander Fleming in 1928. penicillin bacteria

37 *

38 Diverse roles of fungi Medicinal purposes
Cyclosporine: an immunosuppressant drug widely used in organ transplant patients to reduce the activity of the patient's immune system to decrease the risk of organ rejection. Tolypocladium inflatum Cyclosporine

39 Diverse roles of fungi Mutualistic symbiotic relationships
Lichens: Lichens are not a single organism, but rather a combination of two organisms, an alga and a fungus. The alga provides energy by photosynthesis and the fungus provides water and minerals to the algae.

40 Lichen: fungus & alga *

41 Diverse roles of fungi Mutualistic symbiotic relationships
Mycorrhizae are plant roots entangled with fungal hyphae. The fungus releases nutrients from the soil and aids in the absorption of water by the plant roots, and the plant provides energy by photosynthesis to the fungus.

42 Mycorrhizae: Plant Root & Fungus
*

43 Kingdom Fungi is a diverse kingdom!
*

44 Let’s see if we can identify the type…
*

45 Microscopy Photographs
*


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