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Ch 11 Section 2 Fungi

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... basidia form in the grooves or gills under the mushroom cap Other types of club fungi include bracket ... which can cause cancer Used to make penicillin, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ch 11 Section 2 Fungi


1
Ch 11 Section 2 Fungi
2
Fungi
  • Eukaryotic consumers
  • Come in a variety of shapes, sizes and colors

3
Hidden from View
  • Hyphae- chains of cells that make up
    multicellular fungi
  • Mycelium- a twisted mass of fungal hyphae that
    have grown together

4
Consumers
  • Fungi are consumers
  • that cannot eat or engulf food.
  • They must live on or
  • near their food supply

5
Getting Food
  • Most fungi obtain nutrients by secreting
    digestive juices onto the food source, then
    absorbing the dissolved substances
  • Many are decomposers

6
Roots with fungi
  • Some fungi live in symbiotic relationships with
    other organisms
  • On roots of plants produce acid to change the
    minerals in the soil

7
Fungi cytoplasm
  • Holes in the cell walls of fungi allow the
    cytoplasm to move between cells throughout the
    organism

8
Reproduction
  • Asexual or sexual
  • Asexual
  • Hyphae breaks apart and each new piece becomes a
    new individual
  • Production of spores

9
Reproduction
  • Spores a small reproductive cell protected by a
    thick wall
  • Sexual
  • Fungi produce sex cells from special structures
    that join to form new individuals

10
Kinds of Fungi
  • Threadlike Fungi
  • Molds- a shapeless, fuzzy fungus
  • Most live in the soil and are usually decomposers

11
Threadlike fungi
  • Reproduce asexually by forming sporangia,
    extensions of the hyphae that produce spores

12
Threadlike Fungi
  • Reproduce sexually by hyphae from different
    individuals join and develop into specialized
    sporangia

13
Sac Fungi
  • Largest group of fungi, includes yeast, powdery
    mildew, truffles and morels
  • Reproduces sexually by forming a sac called an
    ascus
  • Sexually produced spores develop within the sac

14
Yeast
  • Most are multicellular but yeasts are single
    celled
  • Yeast reproduce asexually by budding, a new cell
    pinches off from an existing cell

15
Uses
  • Yeast is used for making bread
  • Truffles and morels are prized edible sac fungi

16
Club Fungi
  • Most familiar group
  • Umbrella shaped
  • During sexual reproduction, special hyphae
    develop and produce clublike structures called
    basidia

17
Club Fungi
  • Sexual spores develop inside the basidia
  • The mushroom you know is only the sexual spore
    forming part of the organism which form at the
    edge of the mass of hyphae, usually in a circle

18
Club Fungi
  • Most familiar, basidia form in the grooves or
    gills under the mushroom cap
  • Other types of club fungi include bracket fungi,
    puffballs, smuts, and rusts

19
Imperfect Fungi
  • Includes the fungi that doesnt fit into the
    other groups
  • Do not reproduce sexually
  • Most are parasites that cause disease in plants
    and animals

20
Imperfect Fungi
  • Athletes foot fungus on the skin
  • One kind produces a toxin called aflatoxin, which
    can cause cancer
  • Used to make penicillin, cheese, soy sauce and
    citric acid for soft drinks

21
Lichens
  • Combination of fungus and an alga that grow
    intertwined and exist in a symbiotic relationship
  • Producers

22
Lichens
  • Resist drying out because they are protected by
    the fungi cell wall
  • Need only water, air and minerals, so they can
    grow on rocks

23
Lichens
  • They produce acids that break down the rock and
    cause cracks, which become filled with bits of
    rock and dead lichens, making soil for other
    things to grow on

24
Lichens
  • Absorb water and minerals from the air, making
    them sensitive to air pollution
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