Introduction to Mycology - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Introduction to Mycology

Description:

Introduction to Mycology General Mycology Lecture 1 Pl P 421/521 What is a fungus? A eukaryotic, heterotrophic organism devoid of chlorophyll that obtains its ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:7416
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 29
Provided by: DrLoriM2
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Introduction to Mycology


1
Introduction to Mycology
  • General Mycology Lecture 1
  • Pl P 421/521

2
What is a fungus?
  • A eukaryotic, heterotrophic organism devoid of
    chlorophyll that obtains its nutrients by
    absorption, and reproduces by spores.
  • The primary carbohydrate storage product of fungi
    is glycogen.
  • Most fungi have a thallus composed of hyphae
    (sing. hypha) that elongate by tip growth

3
Fungal hyphae form a network called a mycelium
(pl. mycelia)
4
  • Carl Linnaeus (1707-1778) the Father of
    Taxonomy
  • Minerals exist plants exist and live animals
    exist, live and sense.
  • Plants without obvious sexual organs were
    classified in Class Cryptogamia (lichens, fungi,
    mosses, ferns)
  • Fungi are primitive plants under this
    classification of organisms.

5
R. H. Whittakers 1969 Classification
6
Modern Classification
  • At least 7 kingdoms are now recognized
  • Eubacteria, Archaebacteria, Animalia, Plantae,
    Eumycota, Stramenopila (Chromista), Protoctista
    (Protozoa, Protista)

7
(No Transcript)
8
Fungi versus fungi
  • fungus is used inclusively for a heterogenous
    group of organisms that have traditionally been
    studied by mycologists
  • Fungi refers to the organisms in the Kingdom
    Fungi, the true fungi, also called the Eumycota

9
  • Kingdom Fungi
  • Phyla Chytridiomycota
  • Zygomycota
  • Glomeromycota
  • Ascomycota (inc.Deuteromycetes)
  • Basidiomycota

10
(No Transcript)
11
  • Kingdom Stramenopila (Chromista)
  • Phyla Oomycota
  • Hyphochytriomycota
  • Labyrinthulomycota
  • Protists (Protoctists)
  • Phyla Plasmodiophoromycota
  • Dictyosteliomycota
  • Acrasiomycota
  • Myxomycota

12
  • Hierarchical Classification
  • Kingdom Fungi
  • Phylum Basidiomycota
  • Class Basidiomycetes
  • Order Agaricales
  • Family Agaricaceae
  • Genus Agaricus
  • Species
  • Agaricus campestris L.

13
Agaricus campestris L.
  • Agaricus is the genus
  • campestris is the specific epithet
  • The genus species is the Latin binomial note
    that the genus and species are in italics (or
    underlined), the genus is capitalized and the
    species epithet is in lower case
  • L. stands for Linnaeus, the authority
  • Agaricus campestris is the type species of the
    genus

14
Agaricus bisporus (Lange) Imbach
  • Lange first described this fungus as Coprinus
    bisporus
  • Imbach later transferred the species to Agaricus

15
Nomenclature
  • Nomenclature the allocation of scientific
    names to the units a systematist considers to
    merit formal recognition. (Hawksworth et al.,
    1995. The Dictionary of the Fungi). 
  • The nomenclature of fungi is governed by the
    International Code for Botanical Nomenclature, as
    adopted by the International Botanical Congress.

16
Typological Species Concept
  • "Species are as many as were created in the
    beginning by the Infinite."   (Linnaeus, 1758)
  • Each species represented by a type specimen,
    designated in the original description and
    deposited in a recognized collection (eg.,
    herbarium)
  • The name is tied to the type specimen
  • The type specimen is not necessarily typical of
    the entire species!

17
How are fungi named?
  • To determine the correct name for a taxon,
    certain steps must be followed, including
  • Effective publication
  • Valid publication
  • Description or diagnosis in Latin
  • Clear indication of rank
  • Designated type

18
How many species of fungi exist?
  • 80,000 species of fungi described
  • 1,700 new species described each year

19
Estimating the number of fungal species
  • Hawksworth, D. L. (1991). The fungal dimension
    of biodiversity magnitude, significance, and
    conservation. Mycological Research 95 641-655
  • Hawksworth, D.L. (2001) The magnitude of fungal
    diversity the 1.5 million species estimate
    revisited. Mycological Research 105 (12)
    1422-1432.

20
(No Transcript)
21
Fungi are ancient
  • Major fungal lineages are ancient, perhaps
    emerging one billion years ago
  • Fungi were present before the emergence of
    animals and vascular plants

22
Mass extinction at K-T boundary fungal spike
Increasing diversity of angiosperms, mammals,
birds
Gymnosperms dominant, evolution of angiosperms
first birds
Gymnosperms become dominant, first dinosaurs,
first mammals
Mass extinction of 95 of all species
fungal spike
Origin of insects, ferns, seed plants
Earliest terrestrial vascular plants
marine animals diversify first appearance of
most animal phyla diverse algae
Modified from Blackwell, 2001
23
Associations
  • Fungi form symbiotic relationships with a number
    of organisms
  • Lichens
  • Mycorrhizas
  • Endophytes

24
Decomposers
  • As saprotrophs, particularly as decomposers,
    fungi are essential components of the carbon
    cycle and are among the few organisms that can
    break down lignin

25
Pathogens
  • Fungi are important as pathogens of animals and
    plants.
  • Over 70 of all plant diseases are caused by
    fungi

26
(No Transcript)
27
(No Transcript)
28
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com