Synapomorphies that distinguish the fungi:

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Fungi.
Advertisements

Kingdom: Fungi Domain Eukarya Domain Eubacteria Archaea
FUNGI.
Fungi: Recyclers, Pathogens, Parasites, and Plant Partners
Chapter 31 Reading Quiz What are the filaments called that make up mycelium? What are fungi cell walls made of? What characteristic does “dikaryotic” refer.
Plantae Fungi Animalia Protista Monera Kingdom Fungi About 100,000 species Uses: medicine food Ecological value: major decomposers symbiotic relationships.
Fungi Chapter 31. Fungi - heterotrophs - eat by absorbing nutrients - by secreting enzymes to outside which digest food around them; fungi absorbs food.
KEY CONCEPT Fungi are saprobes (decomposers)
AP Biology Domain Bacteria Domain Archaea Domain Eukarya Common ancestor Kingdom: Fungi Domain Eukarya.
Eukaryotic cells Most are multi-celled Some are uni-cellular Heterotrophs Live in moist, warm areas Have Cell Walls FUNGI.
Domain Bacteria Domain Archaea Domain Eukarya Common ancestor Kingdom: Fungi Domain Eukarya.
Chapter 31: Fungi.
Kingdom Fungi This chapter describes the morphology, life cycles, and ecological importance of the kingdom Fungi. The divisions of fungi are established.
FUNGI.
FUNGI.
Chapter 31 Notes Fungi.
Unit 6--Microbiology Chapter 21 Fungi. Fungal Characteristics Filamentous bodies: Hyphae = thin filaments Mycelium = entire mass of hyphae Chitinous cell.
What are fungi? Heterotrophs that secrete digestive enzymes on organic matter and absorb released nutrients –Saprobes feed on organic remains (major decomposers.
Fungi Chapter 31.
PROTISTS AND FUNGI.
FUNGUS KINGDOM. FUNGUS Heterotrophs Feed by releasing digesting enzymes into surroundings then absorbing digested nutrients Ex: mushrooms, mould, mildew.
Chapter 23: Fungi Fungus Diversity Identify what fungi are. Describe habitats of fungi. Outline the structure of fungi. Describe fungi reproduction.
Kingdom Fungi All photographsin this presentation © Pearson Education or Fred M. Rhoades.
Kingdom Fungi. Eukaryotic Heterotrophs (decomposers) Cell walls made of chitin –Complex carbohydrate also found in the external skeletons of insects.
Chapter 18 Fungus.
Fungus Chapter 31 Not as innocent as they look!
Fungi By: Dominic DeCarlo, Brett Rosato, and Brendan Beecher Chapter: 30.
Kingdom Fungi I. General Characteristics 1. Found almost everywhere 2. Used to be classified as plants because they were anchored and have cell walls,
Fungi Chapter 31. Slide 2 of 15 Fungal Commonalities  Heterotrophic & Eukaryotic  Multicellular  Important in the ecosystem as decomposers  Cell walls.
Fungi Section 1: Characteristics of Fungi Section 2: Fungal Diversity
Fungi. Characteristics eukaryotic multicellular (except yeasts) heterotrophic by absorption (saprophytes – feed on dead organic matter) reproduce sexually.
FUNGI. Fungi General Characteristics eukaryote absorptive heterotroph - saprobe or parasite cell walls made of chitin multicellular (except for yeast)
FUNGI. KINGDOM FUNGI Nucleated Single celled Multicellular Sexual Asexual Heterotrophs – Saprotroph – Parasites – Symbiosis.
FUNGI.
Fungi. Characteristics eukaryotic multicellular (except yeasts) heterotrophic by absorption (saprophytes – feed on dead organic matter) reproduce sexually.
Kingdom Fungi Characteristics similar to all Fungi: All eukaryotic
Lecture #13 Date ______ Chapter 31 ~ Fungi. Fungi Heterotrophic by absorption (exoenzymes) Decomposers (saprobes), parasites, mutualistic symbionts (lichens)
Domain Eukarya Modified from slide show by Kim Foglia
Kingdom Fungi.
AP Biology Domain Bacteria Domain Archaea Domain Eukarya Common ancestor Kingdom: Fungi Domain Eukarya.
Fungi By Jacob Squicciarini and Adryan Cheeseboro.
Kingdom Fungi.
Chapter 18 Fungus mHkC2JM53c.
Chapter 21 : Kingdom Fungi Page: 527. What types of Fungi do you know?  Bread Molds  Mushrooms  Molds on oranges  Yeasts  Mildews  Rusts & Smuts.
Fungi. Characteristics of Fungi All fungi are eukaryotic heterotrophs. They are saprobes – absorbing their food from decaying matter around them. They.
Kingdom Fungi. Fungi are NOT plants Red algae Green algae Land plants Fungi Choanoflagellates Myxozoa Animals The ancestor of fungi is thought to have.
Chapter 21 Biology – Miller • Levine
Kingdom Fungi Common Characteristics: Eukaryotic No chlorophyll and are heterotrophs Cell walls of cells are made of chitin Most are multicellular. Only.
The Kingdom Fungi Photo Credit: ©D. Cavagnaro/DRK Photo.
Fungi.
Characteristics of Fungi
Chapter 21 : Kingdom Fungi
Fungi.
Lecture #13 Date ______ Chapter 31 ~ Fungi.
KEY CONCEPT Fungi are heterotrophs that absorb their food.
Kingdom: Fungi Domain Eukarya Domain Bacteria Archaea
Chapter 20: The Fungi.
Chapter 19 part II Fungi.
KEY CONCEPT Fungi are heterotrophs that absorb their food.
Kingdom Fungi Chapter 22.
Kingdom Fungi.
Chapter 31 Chapter 31 ~ Fungi.
Basic characteristics, types of fungi and reproduction
Fungi Kingdom.
FUNGI!.
·Mushrooms, Molds, Morels ·Eukaryotic Heterotrophs
Chapter31:Fungi.
How do fungi obtain nutrients? How are fungal groups characterized?
Domain Eukarya Modified from slide show by Kim Foglia
Domain Eukarya Modified from slide show by Kim Foglia
Presentation transcript:

Synapomorphies that distinguish the fungi: Absorptive heterotrophy Chitin in cell walls

Fungi The fungi live by absorptive nutrition, secreting digestive enzymes that break down large food molecules and absorbing the breakdown products. Some are saprobes (feeding on dead matter); others are parasites. Some are active predators A few have mutually beneficial (symbiotic) relationships with other organisms.

Fungi - body structure of the three most highly evolved clades Fruiting structure - mushroom Mycelium = mat of interwoven hyphae

Fungi – many hyphae are coenocytic

Fungal hyphae

Fungal hyphae – many attack living cells

Fungal hyphae – or even catch prey

Fungal hyphae – or consume dead/decaying organic matter

Fungal hyphae – or live in symbiotic relationships Mycorrhizae on a eucalyptus root

Fungal hyphae – or live in symbiotic relationships: Fungi + green algae = lichens

Fungi

Fungi - Chytridiomycota most primitive types are chytrids aquatic or parasitic grouped with rest of fungi by molecular evidence evolved from flagellated protists.

Fungi - Zygomycota

Reproduction by producing sporangiophores – asexual reproduction

Reproduction by producing zygospores (sexual reproduction)

Zygospore development

Fungi –Glomeromycota – mycorrhizal fungi – symbionts w/ plant roots

Fungi - Ascomycota (sac fungi)

Ascomycota reproduction Note : some species have given up sexual reproduction altogether – see next slides….

Ascomycota (Penicillium) chemical defenses

Ascomycota (Saccharomyces cerevisiae)

Basidiomycota (club fungi,mushrooms)

Basidiomycota (bracket fungus, puffball)

Releasing spores

Basidiomycota - poisonous Amanita muscaris and edible Agaricus bisporus

Basidiomycota reproduction

Lichen (fungi/green algae symbiosis)