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Fungi

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Locomotion of the Mushroom Mushrooms can only move by spreading over acres of land by growing. ... Mushrooms Some mushrooms boast cancer fighting properties. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Fungi


1
Fungi
  • Shannon, Celina Katelyn

2
Types of Fungi
  • Mushrooms
  • Rusts
  • Smuts
  • Puffballs
  • Truffles
  • Morals
  • Molds
  • Yeasts
  • Other unknown organisms

3
Different Types of Fungi
4
Fungi in General
  • Composed of heterotrophic unicellular and
    multi-cellular eukaryotic organisms.
  • They have a complex cell structure.
  • They absorb nutrients instead of ingesting them.
  • Most species are terrestrial.
  • There are more than 100 000 different species of
    fungi.

5
Anatomy of the Shiitake Mushroom
  • Made of filaments called hyphae.
  • In large fungi, hyphae interlace to form a tissue
    called mycelium which then form the mushroom. The
    mycelium grows underground or within decaying
    wood.
  • Initially the fungus emerges as a button which
    may be covered by a membrane known as the
    universal veil.

6
The Shiitake Mushroom
7
Anatomy of Yeast
  • Yeast is eukaryotic so it has similar inside a
    plant or animal cell, but without the high
    percentage of non-coding DNA.
  • They have thick cell walls made of chitin.
  • It uses DNA template for protein synthesis and it
    has a larger ribosomes.
  • Yeast also has cells made of hyphae.

8
Physiology of the Mushroom
  • Mushrooms have cells with two nuclei in each.
  • These nuclei fuse together as the mushroom grows.
  • Mushrooms do not have chloroplast because they
    cannot do photosynthesis.

9
Physiology of Yeast
  • Yeast has two nuclei in each cell.
  • When two different strains of hyphae meet, they
    fuse together and when they divide, produce 4 new
    nuclei one for each new cell.

10
Different Types of Yeast
11
Locomotion of the Mushroom
  • Mushrooms can only move by spreading over acres
    of land by growing.
  • Other than that they are completely unable to
    move.
  • In order to move to another location, passing
    insects pick up their spores and carry them to
    another spot. There the spores will be planted
    in the ground and the cycle of a mushroom will
    begin.

12
Locomotion of Yeast
  • Yeast has none of the usual organelles which
    other microscopic organisms use to move.

13
Diet and Digestion of the Mushroom
  • Mushrooms are decomposers that feed on dead plant
    and animal matter.
  • They break down matter by secreting powerful
    enzymes.
  • They start growing under the ground, getting
    energy by the nutrients of the soil, and when the
    conditions are right, they sprout above ground.

14
Diet and Digestion of Yeast
  • Yeast gets its food from glucose.
  • They digest food by giving off carbon dioxide and
    alcohol.

15
Exertion of the Mushroom
  • The threads of the mycelium exert digestive
    juices.
  • The mycelium are fine threads in the mushroom
    that take in and release nutrients.
  • They also exert wastes by diffusion.

16
Exertion of Yeast
  • Yeast ferments sugars and gives off CO2 and
    alcohol. When you add yeast to dough (bread) it
    will rise because the CO2 from the yeast gets
    trapped in tiny bubbles in the dough, which in
    the end is what causes the dough to rise.

17
Circulation
  • The circulation of the yeast and mushroom are the
    same.
  • They are single celled so they dont have a
    circulatory system.
  • They are small enough to remove wastes and to
    obtain their own oxygen.
  • Diffusion is what distributes substances inside
    the cell.

18
Respiration of the Mushroom
  • Mushrooms undergo cellular respiration.
  • After harvested, mushrooms still have a high rate
    of respiration.
  • Cooling slows down respiration, so the mushroom
    stays fresh longer.

19
Fungi
20
Respiration of Yeast
  • Yeast go through both aerobic and anaerobic
    respiration. When oxygen is not present it will
    break down the glucose into alcohol and two ATP (
    anaerobic respiration).

21
Life Cycle of the Mushroom
  • Spores are released into the environment, and
    they land somewhere.
  • When the conditions are good, the spores send out
    tiny threads of hyphae.
  • The hyphae has to find compatible hyphae, which
    starts to grow into a mushroom.

22
Life Cycle of Yeast
  • They reproduce both asexually and sexually.
  • They undergo a life cycle of mitosis and growth.

23
Interesting Facts About the Mushroom
  • Basidiomycota Mushrooms
  • Some mushrooms boast cancer fighting properties.
  • There are over 2 million species of mushrooms.
  • A single adult mushroom will drop as many as 16
    billion spores.
  • Early Romans referred to them as Food of the
    Gods.
  • They have been used in Chinese Medicine for
    years.

24
Uses of Fungi
25
Interesting Facts About Yeast
  • Saccharomyces Cerevisae yeast
  • Yeast is woken up when water is mixed with it.
  • 10 to 20 yeast cells could fit on the end of a
    piece of hair.
  • Yeast was used before writing was invented.
  • Yeast can be taken as a vitamin.
  • Yeast reproduces so quickly it has evolved into
    something completely different than what we had 1
    thousand years ago.

26
Interesting facts about Yeast
  • Saccharomyces Cerevisiae Brewers Yeast
  • Ascomycota Yeast
  • They are one of the most important fungi.
  • They are the reason why bread rises and without
    them there would be no possible way to make
    alcohol.
  • Yeasts help the circulation of our blood.

27
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