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moorefungi

Page history last edited by wikiuser0047 13 years, 10 months ago

1. List some characteristics of fungi.

 

  • Eukaryotic 
  • Do not contain chlorophyll
  • Nonphotosynthetic
  • Absorptive heterotrophs - digest food first & then absorb it into their bodies
  • Release digestive enzymes to break down organic material or their host
  • Store food energy as glycogen
  • Most are saprobes – live on other dead organisms
  • Important decomposers & recyclers of nutrients in the environment
  • Most are multicellular, but some unicellular like yeast
  • Some are internal or external parasites; a few are predators that capture prey
  • Nonmotile
  • Lack true roots, stems, & leaves
  • Cell walls are made of chitin (a complex polysaccharide)
  • Grow as microscopic tubes or filaments called hyphae that contain cytoplasm & nuclei
  • Hyphal networks are called mycelium
  • Some are edible
  • Reproduce by sexual & asexual spores
  • Antibiotic penicillin comes from Penicillium mold
  • Classified by their sexual reproductive structures
  • Grow best in warm, moist environments preferring shade
  • Mycology – study of fungi
  • Fungicide – chemicals used to kill fungi
  • Includes yeasts, molds, mushrooms, ringworm, puffballs, rusts, smuts, etc.
  • Fungi may have evolved from prokaryotes by endosymbiosis

 

 

 

 

2.  How are fungi adapted to their environment?

 

 

 

 

 

5. For each of the fungi groups, go on google.com, and search for images for each group.  Paste a sample picture below. for each group.

 

 

 

 

6. How do fungi get energy to make ATP, the rechargeable battery of cells?

 

 

7. How do fungi reproduce? Do fungi engage in sex?

Reproductive Structures

  •  Most fungi reproduce asexually & sexually
  • Asexual reproduction produces genetically identical organisms & is the most common method used
  • Sexual reproduction in fungi occurs when nutrients or water are scarce
  • Fruiting bodies are modified hyphae that make asexual spores
  • Fruiting bodies consist of an upright stalk or sporangiophore with a sac containing spores called the sporangium


SPORANGIOPHORES

  • Types of fruiting bodies include basidia, sporangia, & ascus
  • Spores – haploid cells with dehydrated cytoplasm & a protective coat capable of developing into new individuals
  • Wind, animals, water, & insects spread spores
  • When spore lands on moist surface, new hyphae form

Asexual Reproduction in Fungi

  • Fungi reproduce asexually when environmental conditions are favorable
  • Some unicellular fungi reproduce by mitosis
  • Yeast cells reproduce by budding where a part of the cell pinches off to produce more yeast cells

  • Athlete’s foot fungus reproduce by fragmentation from a small piece of mycelium
  • Most fungi reproduce asexually by spores
  • Penicillium mold produces spores called conidia without a protective sac on the top of a stalk called the conidiophore

Sexual Reproduction in Fungi

  • Fungi reproduce sexually when environmental conditions are unfavorable
  • No male or female fungi
  • Two mating types --- plus (+) and minus (-)  
  • Fertilization occurs when (+) hyphae fuse with (-) hyphae to form a 2N or diploid zygote
  • Some fungi show dimorphism (ability to change their form in response to their environmental conditions)

 

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