Molecular analyses supports the division of the fungi into four phyla.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Level 1 Biological Diversity Jim Provan
Advertisements

Domain Eukarya Kingdom Fungi.
Chapter 19 Señora Ettinger
Fungi Lab. Tentative Phylogeny Fig 28.8 Generalized fungal lifecycle Spore-producing structures Spores ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION GERMINATION Zygote Mycelium.
True Fungi break down dead organic material provide numerous drugs
Classification of Fungi. Fungi are more closely related to animals than plants: Animals and fungi have flagellate cells Animals and fungi have flagellate.
Fig
Fungi are heterotrophs that acquire their nutrients by absorption.
Fungi. Overview Fungi are eukaryotes Most are multicellular Differ from other eukaryotes in nutritional mode, structural organization, growth & reproduction.
Chapter 31: Fungi.
Kingdom Fungi Outcome: Describe and observe the Kingdom Fungi.
Kingdom Fungi (ch. 26) If at first you don’t like a fungus … Just wait a little, It will grow on you.  Mycology = study of fungi General Characteristics.
Prof. Khaled H. Abu-Elteen
Fungi.
Honey Mushroom, Oregon, subterranean filaments =1,800 football fields
Kingdom Fungi Eukaryotic, cell walls made of chitin, saprophytic or parasitic and essential as decomposers.
Kingdom Fungi The characteristics of fungi The evolution of the fungi
Kingdom Fungi.
Fungi Fungi are eukaryotic heterotrophs that have cell walls. The cell wall is made of chitin, a complex carbohydrate found in the external skeleton of.
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
Chapter 31 Fungi.
Chapter 31 Notes Fungi.
Fungi Chapter 31.
Kingdom Fungi Fungi are heterotrophs; they cannot make their own food. Fungi absorb nutrients from the environment outside of its body by secreting powerful.
Chapter 25 Fungi. Fig Fig Reproductive structure Spore-producing structures Hyphae Mycelium 20 µm.
Section A: Introduction to the Fungi
Objective: Kingdom Fungi
“The Mighty Mushroom” take a walk through a forest
1. Characteristics 2  Eukaryotes  Most are saprobes (live on dead organisms)  Grow best in warm, moist environments  Mycology is the study of fungi.
CHARACTERISTICS EUKARYOTIC MOST MULTICELLULAR HETEROTROPHIC : Decomposers!! –SAPROBES OR PARASITIC BODY IS MADE OF HYPHAE HAVE CELL WALLS MADE OF CHITIN.
What did Mr. Fungus say to Ms. Algae, when he proposed? I lichen you!
IV. Kingdom Fungus Chapter 31 - Fungi A. Estimated 1.5 million species Fig D. Fungi are heterotrophs that absorb food after digesting with enzymes.
Fungi Unit 8- Chapter 31. What is a Fungi? Usually multicellular Usually multicellular Above ground structures (mushrooms) Above ground structures (mushrooms)
Decomposers, Mutualists, and Killers
KINGDOM FUNGI. DNA evidence now indicates kingdom fungi is more closely related to animals than plants!!!!
Kingdom Fungi All photographsin this presentation © Pearson Education or Fred M. Rhoades.
Matt Ponzini, Shane D’Cruz, and Nikhil Popat.  Diversity of Fungi  100,000+ species of Fungi are known (Estimated to be 1.5 Million worldwide)  Fungi.
Fungi. Fungal Characteristics: Eukaryotic Multicellular Kingdom Feed by Absorptive Nutrition Tubular cell shape, called Hyphae –Septate or aseptate hyphae.
Fungi. Basic Information: Fungi are... - eukaryotes - mostly multicellular - sometimes unicellular (yeast) - very diverse with an estimated 1.5 million.
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Chapter 31: Fungi - Mighty Mushrooms Fungi are diverse and widespread They are.
WARNING The following presentation may contain images and details which some may find disgusting and/or offensive. Viewer discretion is advised.
While often mistaken for mosses or other simple plants when viewed at a distance, lichens are actually a symbiotic association of millions of photosynthetic.
Kingdom Fungi is comprised of organisms such as mushrooms, molds, and yeasts, which are eukaryotic heterotrophs that digest food outside of their bodies.
Chapter 31 – Introduction to Fungi. Fungi characteristics Heterotrophic External digestion Hyphae –Threadlike filaments –Chains of cells can be separated.
The Kingdom Fungi.
Chapter 31 Fungi.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint ® Lecture Presentations for Biology Eighth Edition Neil Campbell.
Brightstorm Video CHARACTERISTICS EUKARYOTIC MOST MULTICELLULAR HETEROTROPHIC : Decomposers!! –SAPROBES OR PARASITIC BODY IS MADE OF HYPHAE HAVE CELL.
Fungi General Characteristics Classification Symbiotic Relationships in Lichens.
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Prentice Hall, Inc. Chapter 20 The Diversity of Fungi.
1 THE KINGDOM FUNGI OBJECTIVES 21.1 Identify the defining characteristics of fungi. Describe the main structures of a fungus. Explain how fungi reproduce.
Chapter 21 Biology – Miller • Levine
Chapter 18 Section 2: Kingdom fungi consists of diverse forms.
1.  Mycology- study of fungus 2 Characteristics 3.
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint Lectures for Biology, Seventh Edition Neil Campbell and Jane Reece.
Muhammad Zeeshan Nazar
Fungi are no longer considered plants because they: 1. Reproduce by haploid spores.
The Kingdom Fungi Photo Credit: ©D. Cavagnaro/DRK Photo.
Fungi Fungi grow as filaments – hyphae Mycelium – mass of hyphae
Section B2: Diversity of Fungi (continued)
Kingdom Fungi Ch. 31 Lecture Objectives Fungal Characteristics
Kingdom: fungi.
AP Biology Crosby High School
Multicellular Fungus: hyphae …
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
Section B1: Diversity of Fungi
The Kingdom Fungi Ode to Mushrooms!.
Fig
Fungi Level 1 Biological Diversity Jim Provan Campbell: Chapter 31.
Presentation transcript:

Molecular analyses supports the division of the fungi into four phyla. Diversity of Fungi More than 100,000 species of fungi are known and mycologists estimate that there are actually about 1.5 million species worldwide. Molecular analyses supports the division of the fungi into four phyla. Fig. 31.4 Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Phylum Zygomycota: Zygote fungi form resistant structures during sexual reproduction Most of the 600 zygomycete, or zygote fungi, are terrestrial, living in soil or on decaying plant and animal material. One zygomycete group form mycorrhizae, mutualistic associations with the roots of plants. Zygomycete hyphae are coenocytic, with septa found only in reproductive structures. Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

The life cycle and biology of Rhizopus stolonifer, black bread mold, is typical of zygomycetes. Horizontal hyphae spread out over food, penetrate it, and digest nutrients. In the asexual phase, hundreds of haploid spores develop in sporangia at the tips of upright hyphae. If environmental conditions deteriorate, this species of Rhizopus reproduces sexually. Plasmogamy of opposite mating types produces a zygosporangium. Inside this multinucleate structure, the heterokaryotic nuclei fuse to form diploid nuclei that undergo meiosis. Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

The zygomycete Rhizopus can reproduce either asexually or sexually. Fig. 31.7 Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

The zygosporangia are resistant to freezing and drying. When conditions improve, the zygosporangia release haploid spores that colonize new substrates. Some zygomycetes, such as Pilobolus, can actually aim their spores. Fig. 31.8 Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

3. Phylum Ascomycota: Sac fungi produce sexual spores in saclike asci Mycologists have described over 60,000 species of ascomycetes, or sac fungi. They range in size and complexity from unicellular yeasts to elaborate cup fungi and morels. Fig. 31.9 Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

The defining feature of the Ascomycota is the production of sexual spores in saclike asci. In many species, the spore-forming asci are collected into macroscopic fruiting bodies, the ascocarp. Examples of ascocarps include the edible parts of truffles and morels. Ascomycetes reproduce asexually by producing enormous numbers of asexual spores, which are usually dispersed by the wind. These naked spores, or conidia, develop in long chains or clusters at the tips of specialized hyphae called conidiophores. Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Ascomycetes are characterized by an extensive heterokaryotic stage during the formation of ascocarps. Fig. 31.10 Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

(1) The sexual phase of the ascomycete lifestyle begins when haploid mycelia of opposite mating types become intertwined and form an antheridium and ascogonium. (2) Plasmogamy occurs via a cytoplasmic bridge and haploid nuclei migrate from the antheridium to the ascogonium, creating a heterokaryon. (3) The ascogonium produces dikaryotic hyphae that develop into an ascocarp. (4) The tips of the ascocarp hyphae are partitioned into asci. Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

(5) Karyogamy occurs within these asci and the diploid nuclei divide by meiosis, (6) yielding four haploid nuclei. (7) Each haploid nuclei divides once by mitosis to produce eight nuclei, often in a row, and cell walls develop around each nucleus to form ascospores. (8) When mature, all the ascospores in an ascus are dispersed at once, often leading to a chain reaction of release, from other asci. (9) Germinating ascospores give rise to new haploid mycelia. (10) Asexual reproduction occurs via conidia. Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Phylum Basidiomycota: Club fungi have long-lived dikaryotic mycelia Approximately 25,000 fungi, including mushrooms, shelf fungi, puffballs, and rusts, are classified in the phylum Basidiomycota. Fig. 31.11 Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

The name of the phylum is derived from the basidium, a transient diploid stage. The clublike shape of the basidium is responsible for the common name club fungus. Basidiomycetes are important decomposers of wood and other plant materials. Of all fungi, these are the best at decomposing the complex polymer lignin, abundant in wood. Two groups of basidiomycetes, the rusts and smuts, include particularly destructive plant parasites. Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

The life cycle of a club fungus usually includes a long-lived dikaryotic mycelium. Fig. 31.12 Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

(1) Two haploid mycelia of opposite mating type undergo plasmogamy, (2) creating a dikaryotic mycelium that ultimately crowds out the haploid parents. (3) Environmental cues, such as rain or temperature change, induce the dikaryotic mycelium to form compact masses that develop into basidiocarps. Cytoplasmic streaming from the mycelium swells the hyphae, rapidly expanding them into an elaborate fruiting body, the basidiocarp (mushrooms in many species). The dikaryotic mycelia are long-lived, generally producing a new crop of basidiocarp each year. Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

(4) The surface of the basidiocarp’s gills are lined with terminal dikaryotic cells called basidia. (5) Karyogamy produces diploid nuclei which then undergo meiosis, (6) each yielding four haploid nuclei. Each basidium grows four appendages, and one haploid nucleus enters each and develops into a basidiospore. (7) When mature, the basidiospores are propelled slightly by electrostatic forces into the spaces between the gills and then dispersed by the wind. (8) The basidiospores germinate in a suitable habitat and grow into a short-lived haploid mycelia. Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

Asexual reproduction in basidiomycetes is much less common than in ascomycetes. A billion sexually-produced basidiospores may be produced by a single, store-bought mushroom. The cap of the mushrooms support a huge surface area of basidia on gills. These spores drop beneath the cap and are blown away. Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings

By concentration growth in the hyphae of mushrooms, a basidiomycete mycelium can erect basidiocarps in just a few hours. A ring of mushrooms may appear overnight. At the center of the ring are areas where the mycelium has already consumed all the available nutrients. As the mycelium radiates out, it decomposes the organic matter in the soil and mushrooms form just behind this advancing edge. Fig. 31.13 Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings