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Last day- talking about fungi, covered some basic characteristics of the kingdom & started looking at some of the phyla
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Phylum Glomeromycota - Glomeromycetes Root AM Small group (about 160 spp. known) but important as nearly all form arbuscular mycorrhizae
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About 90% of plant species form associations with glomeromycetes - fungus supplies phosphate & other minerals plus H 2 O - plant supplies sugars & other organic compounds - important for growth of corn, wheat & many other plants
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(a) The cup-shaped ascocarps (fruiting bodies) of Aleuria aurantia give this species its common name: orange peel fungus. (b) The edible ascocarp of Morchella esculenta, the succulent morel, is often found under trees in orchards. (c) Tuber melanosporum is a truffle, an ascocarp that grows underground and emits strong odors. These ascocarps have been dug up and the middle one sliced open. (d) Neurospora crassa feeds as a mold on bread and other food (SEM). 10 m Phylum Ascomycota – Sac Fungi Largest phylum of fungi - about 65,000 spp. described - from unicellular yeasts, to molds, to complex cup fungi, morels, etc.
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- form sexual spores in saclike asci - asci contained within ascocarp which may be large structure (e.g. ‘mushroom’ of a morel) Many ascomycetes are saprobes, others mutualists, but also many plant pathogens - about 40% of spp. form the fungal partner in a lichen, an association between fungus & photosynthetic green algae or cyanobacteria ascus with 8 ascospores
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Neurospora life cycle – an ascomycete
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Asexual spores called conidia simply produced at end of hyphae - conidia may at times fuse on to hyphae of other mating strain leading to plasmogamy (etc.)
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(a) Fly agaric (Amanita muscaria), a common species in conifer forests in the northern hemisphere (b) Maiden veil fungus (Dictyphora), a fungus with an odor like rotting meat (c) Shelf fungi, important decomposers of wood (d) Puffballs emitting spores Phylum Basidiomycota – the Club Fungi Another large group (~30,000 spp.), includes many large ‘mushrooms’, shelf fungi, puffballs, but also plant parasites (rusts & smuts) Especially good at breaking down tough lignin & cellulose of wood
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- usually live as dikaryotic mycelium - occasionally produce basidiocarp (fruiting body) with club-shaped basidia
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- karyogamy occurs in basidia, then meiosis produces 4 basidiospores
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‘Fairy ring’ – basidiocarps produced at edge of expanding mycelium
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Importance of fungi Immensely important, usually positive but… As decomposers, vital role in recycling nutrients
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As symbionts (endomycorrhizae, ectomycorhizae, endophytes living in plant leaves, etc.) extremely important in promoting plant growth
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As component of lichens, important in succession of barren habitats, as bioindicator, etc.
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As plant pathogens, very damaging financially & ecologically chestnut blightcorn smutergots on rye
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Role in producing baked goods, cheeses, alcohol, drugs & other useful chemicals is of huge economic value
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The Plants - Kingdom Plantae Plants are relative newcomers to Earth - earliest fossils ‘only’ 475 MYA
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What makes a plant a plant? - many derived traits of plants relate to move to land Apical meristems: localized areas of cell division & growth at tips of shoots and roots, allowing increase in length
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Alternation of generations, & multicellular embryos - 2 distinct generations, haploid gametophyte produces eggs & sperm, diploid sporophyte produces asexual spores - both generations multicellular, & sometimes independent
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Fertilized egg develops within gametophyte tissue as multicellular embryo - specialized placental transfer cells for obtaining nutrition from parent - land plants also known as embryophytes
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Walled spores produced in sporangia - multicellular organs where spores produced
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Tough layer of sporopollenin (a complex polymer) coating spores & pollen, protects from dessication
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Multicellular gametangia where gametes produced & protected - archegonium produces eggs - antheridium produces sperm
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Where did they come from? Presumably evolved from some sort of algae… - multicelular, eukaryotic & photosynthetic (like red, brown & some green algae) - cell walls made of cellulose (like brown algae, green algae & dinoflagellates) - have chloroplasts with chlorophylls a & b (like green algae, euglenids, & some dinoflagellates) - green algae 3 for 3…
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One group of green algae, the charophytes, share more: - rosette shaped cellulose- synthesizing complexes - peroxisome enzymes - similar flagellated sperm
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…and formation of phragmoplast in dividing cell - cytoskeletal elements, serve as scaffold for new cell plate …and also DNA sequences support close relationship
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Earliest branches off plant phylogeny are lumped as ‘bryophytes’, paraphyletic (?) group lacking complex vascular tissue
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Life cycle of non- vascular plants dominated by gametophyte generation - start as thin filaments: protonemata - gametophores have antheridia or archegonia at tip, produce sperm or eggs
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- zygote (2n) grows in archegonium, foot absorbs nutrients - develops into sporophyte with seta & capsule - meiosis produces haploid spores to start next generation
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Liverworts – Phylum Hepatophyta – about 9,000 spp. ? - gametophytes may be leafy or thalloid - have air pores that stay open for gas exchange
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Hornworts – Phylum Anthocerophyta - only 100 spp. - named for sporophyte shape, & ‘wort’ = herb - early colonists of open moist soils, symbiotic w. cyanobacteria
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Hornworts show important adaptations to life on land: waxy cuticle covering surface & stomata for gas exchange with guard cells to control opening
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Mosses – Phylum Bryophyta - 15,000 spp., some abundant - ‘leafy’ structure, leaves one cell thick, absorb water & minerals - ‘non-vascular’ plants, but may have simple water conducting cells (hydroids) in ‘stem’ & leaf midvein - anchored in ground by delicate rhizoids
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- young sporophytes green & photosynthetic, turn brown, reddish, etc. as they mature - capsule has peristome with teeth that open or close with humidity
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Sphagnum bogs cover large areas in cool climate areas - important ecologically, & as carbon sink Often, low pH, temps & O 2 levels lead to slow decay…
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Peat traditionally harvested as fuel (& still is), & extensive use in gardening
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Eventually, plants developed more sophisticated vascular systems to transport water & food, & grew larger
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The ‘seedless vascular plants’ again a paraphyletic group, defined by what they lack rather than shared derived traits - a ‘grade’, not a ‘clade’ Some fossil relatives may have lacked roots & even proper vascular tissue, though do show branching growth
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Modern vascular plants do share several traits, including life cycles with dominant sporophyte: - sperm still must swim through film of H 2 O to reach egg
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Vascular tissue includes: Xylem – transports water & minerals - made up of tracheids & sometimes vessels - dead cells, strengthened by lignin Phloem – carries sugars & organic compounds through living sieve cells or sieve-tube elements
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