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Dana Hock

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Students should be able to describe the morphology , life cycles and economic ... Fruticose. Foliose. Answers to Study. Guide 28.2. A. conidia ( asexual) I. basidocarp ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Dana Hock


1
  • Dana Hock
  • Put any additional information here

2
Introduction
  • Students should be able to describe the
    morphology , life cycles and economic importance
    of the major divisions of Fungi

3
Fungi Kingdom
  • Fungi are multicellular, eukaryotic heterotrophs
    which obtain their nourishment by absortion

4
Structural and life history
  • asci- spore producing sacs
  • ascocarp- fruiting bodies
  • basidocarp-fruiting bodies of basidia ( club
    shaped )
  • Mating strains /- different phenotypic fungal
    types no sex
  • sporangium-haploid spores develop

5
Structural and life history
  • Chitn- material of construction in fungi made of
    a nitrogen containing polysaccharide
  • Hyphae-fungal filaments
  • Mycelium-provide and extensive surface for
    absorption
  • Septa- cross partitions
  • Haustoria-modified fungal hypahe that penetrate
    a host s tissue

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Classification
  • Three major divisions( phyla) based on method of
    reproduction
  • Zygomycota- zygote fungi
  • Ascomycotta- sac fungi
  • Basidomycota-club Fungi

8
Alternation of Generation in Fungi
  • Coencytic- many nuclei in one large cell
  • dikaryotic- two haploid nuclei in one cell that
    have not fused
  • plasmogamy- fusion of cytoplasm without nuclear
    fusion
  • karyogamy-fusion of nuclei

9
Zygomycota
  • Bread molds and mycorrhizae
  • Hyphae are coenocytic
  • erect hyphae with sporangia produce spores
  • dikaryotic zygosporangia produced
  • karyogomy followed immediately by meiosis

10
  • Common bread mold

sporangia
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Haploid spores
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Ascomycota
  • From unicellular yeast to Morells
  • many are mutualistic ( Lichens)
  • conidia-asexual spores produced in chains or
    clusters
  • ascocarps-dikaryoting fruiting bodies
  • asci-terminal sac-like cells where karyogomy
    occurs followed by meiosis results in ascospores

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Parasitic forms
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morrel
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Basidomycota
  • Mushrooms, shelf fungi, puffballs, and rusts
  • produce spores on a club shaped basidium during a
    short diploid stage
  • basidocarp- fruiting body of dikaryotic hyphae
  • karyogamy and meiosis occurs in cells at the tip
    ( basidia )making spores

19
mushrooms
20
Gills on underside of cap
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Mycorrhizae
  • Fungal hyphae form a beneficial (mutualistic)
    relationship with pplant roots

25
Lichens
  • Symbiotic association of Fungus and algae
  • Mutualism fungus absorbs moisture and minerals
    providing a suitable growing area/ algae provides
    carbohydrates by photosynthesis

26
Crustose
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Fruticose
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Foliose
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Answers to Study Guide 28.2
  • A. conidia ( asexual) I. basidocarp
  • B. ascocarp J. basidium
  • C. ascospore K. basidospore
  • D. asci L.
    basidomycete
  • E. ascomycete ( cota)
  • G. zygosporangium ( zygote)
  • F. Sporangia
  • H. zygomycete

30
Test Your Knowledge
  • 1. Septum
  • 2. Dikaryon
  • 3. Chitin
  • 4. Condidia
  • 5. Basidium
  • 6. Asci
  • 7. Mycorrhizae
  • 8. Zygospore
  • 9. Coenocytic
  • 10. Chtridionmycota

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Deuteromycota
  • Imperfect fungi
  • reproduce only asexually
  • pennicillin mold, blue cheese

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Mycorrhizae
  • Fungal hyphae form a beneficial (mutualistic)
    relationship with plant roots

36
Deuteromycota- athletes foot fungus
37
Athletes foot
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