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Fungi are no longer considered plants because they: 1. Reproduce by haploid spores.

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Presentation on theme: "Fungi are no longer considered plants because they: 1. Reproduce by haploid spores."— Presentation transcript:

1

2 Fungi are no longer considered plants because they: 1. Reproduce by haploid spores

3 2. Made of long filaments called hyphae 3. Have cell walls made of chitin

4 4. Do not have chlorophyll 5. Digest their food before they ingest it ( Extracellular digestion, also known as absorption feeders )

5 Most Fungi are saprophytic, some are parasitic Fungi grow in moist, dark, warm places

6 Fungi reproduce asexually by fragmentation, budding, and spore production

7 Most fungi also reproduce sexually Fungi are classified by the way they reproduce

8 There are more than 65,000 species of fungi; most are microscopic

9 Septum Hyphae structure True MoldsAll other fungi Pore

10 Part II: Classification There are 4 phyla of fungi

11 Phylum:Zygomycota Structure: many interwoven hyphae with numerous spore- bearing stalks called sporangiophores sticking up

12 Sporangiophore

13 Asexual rep: haploid spores growing on stalks Sexual rep: fusion of hyphae, develops a zygospore

14 Zygospore

15 Habitat: soil; baked goods; most are terrestrial; some parasitic on insects

16 Example 1: Cordyceps (parasitic on a grasshopper)

17 Example 2: Black bread mold (Rhizopus sp.)

18 Importance: Destroy many foods; destroy lumber; that all leads to “big bucks” wasted

19 1-Zygomycota life cycle Rhizoids Zygospore Sporangia Stolon

20 2-Basidiomycota Cap Stipe Gills

21 Structure: spores on a fruiting body called a basidiocarp; spores grow on exterior surface of basidia

22 Asexual Reprod.: Fragmentation; Asexual basidiospores Sexual Reprod.: Hyphae fuse; fruiting body (basidiocarp) grows

23 Basidia Basidospores

24 Habitat: all terrestrial; decomposers of plants

25 Examples: mushrooms, shelf fungi, puffballs, stinkhorn, rusts, smuts

26 Importance: many edible; many are plant pathogens (corn smut, wheat rust…)

27 3-Ascomycota

28 Structure: spores on a fruiting body called an ascocarp; ascospores grow in an interior sac- like structure called an ascus

29 Asexual Reprod.: In unicellular form (yeast) budding which is unequal mitosis. In others, asexual spores form

30 Sexual Reprod.: hyphae fuse, grow fruiting body (ascocarp), then, develop spores called ascospores

31 BUDDING

32 Ascus Ascospores

33 Habitat: grow on wood, soil, & other substrates; some pathogenic

34 Examples: Unicellular: Yeast Multicellular: Cup fungi, Truffles, Morels, Mildew

35 Importance: Many edible; yeast important in fermentation (big money in fermentation science)

36 4-Deuteromycota Conidiophore Conidiospores

37 Structure: many spore-bearing filaments

38 Reproduction: ONLY asexual reproduction; spores grow on conidia (a structure that looks like a fork); conidiospores look like strings of beads

39 Habitat: soil; plants; and many on animals

40 Examples: Penicillium sp.; Aspergillis sp.; Athletes foot and Ringworm (both types ofTinea sp.–where the name Tinactin comes from)

41 Importance: used to make medicines; many destroy foods; many pathogenic/parasitic on animals


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