What are Fungi? Most fungi share three important characteristics: They are eukaryotes, use spores to...

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Transcript of What are Fungi? Most fungi share three important characteristics: They are eukaryotes, use spores to...

Page 1: What are Fungi? Most fungi share three important characteristics: They are eukaryotes, use spores to reproduce, and are heterotrophs that feed in a similar.
Page 2: What are Fungi? Most fungi share three important characteristics: They are eukaryotes, use spores to reproduce, and are heterotrophs that feed in a similar.

What are Fungi?

Most fungi share three important characteristics: They are eukaryotes, use spores to reproduce, and are heterotrophs that feed in a similar way.

Page 3: What are Fungi? Most fungi share three important characteristics: They are eukaryotes, use spores to reproduce, and are heterotrophs that feed in a similar.

Cell Structure

The structures that make up the bodies of multicellular fungi are called hyphae.

Page 4: What are Fungi? Most fungi share three important characteristics: They are eukaryotes, use spores to reproduce, and are heterotrophs that feed in a similar.

gills

cap

stalk

Page 5: What are Fungi? Most fungi share three important characteristics: They are eukaryotes, use spores to reproduce, and are heterotrophs that feed in a similar.

How Do Fungi Obtain Food?

The chemicals that ooze from the hyphae of a fungus into a food source break down the food.

Page 6: What are Fungi? Most fungi share three important characteristics: They are eukaryotes, use spores to reproduce, and are heterotrophs that feed in a similar.

Athlete's foot is caused by a fungus that feeds on chemicals in a person's skin.

                                                                                                    

Page 7: What are Fungi? Most fungi share three important characteristics: They are eukaryotes, use spores to reproduce, and are heterotrophs that feed in a similar.

Yeasts differ from most other fungi because they are unicellular. 

Page 8: What are Fungi? Most fungi share three important characteristics: They are eukaryotes, use spores to reproduce, and are heterotrophs that feed in a similar.

Reproduction in Fungi

Fungi produce spores in structures called fruiting bodies.

Page 9: What are Fungi? Most fungi share three important characteristics: They are eukaryotes, use spores to reproduce, and are heterotrophs that feed in a similar.

Asexual Reproduction

When there is adequate moisture and food, most fungi reproduce asexually by growing fruiting bodies that release thousands of spores.

Page 10: What are Fungi? Most fungi share three important characteristics: They are eukaryotes, use spores to reproduce, and are heterotrophs that feed in a similar.

Asexual Reproduction

Unicellular yeast cells undergo a form of asexual reproduction called budding.

See where the bud came off?

Page 11: What are Fungi? Most fungi share three important characteristics: They are eukaryotes, use spores to reproduce, and are heterotrophs that feed in a similar.

Sexual Reproduction

If growing conditions are unfavorable, the hyphae may grow together to exchange genetic material.

Why is this advantageous?

Page 12: What are Fungi? Most fungi share three important characteristics: They are eukaryotes, use spores to reproduce, and are heterotrophs that feed in a similar.

Classification of Fungi

Fungi are classified into groups depending on the shape of their spore-producing structures.

There are four groups:

Page 13: What are Fungi? Most fungi share three important characteristics: They are eukaryotes, use spores to reproduce, and are heterotrophs that feed in a similar.

Threadlike Fungi

Rhizopus sporangia X 40

Page 14: What are Fungi? Most fungi share three important characteristics: They are eukaryotes, use spores to reproduce, and are heterotrophs that feed in a similar.

Sac Fungi

morels

morels

Cyathus olla bird's nest fungi

 

Page 15: What are Fungi? Most fungi share three important characteristics: They are eukaryotes, use spores to reproduce, and are heterotrophs that feed in a similar.

Club Fungi

Hypholoma rasciculare

Hygrocybe collucera

Puffballs - Lycoperdon perlatum

Page 16: What are Fungi? Most fungi share three important characteristics: They are eukaryotes, use spores to reproduce, and are heterotrophs that feed in a similar.

Imperfect Fungi

Penicillium Conidia X 400

penicillin

Page 17: What are Fungi? Most fungi share three important characteristics: They are eukaryotes, use spores to reproduce, and are heterotrophs that feed in a similar.

Fungi and the Living World

Fungi that decompose dead organisms return important nutrients to the soil.CARRION-DECOMPOSING FUNGUS

Page 18: What are Fungi? Most fungi share three important characteristics: They are eukaryotes, use spores to reproduce, and are heterotrophs that feed in a similar.

Bakers add yeast to bread dough to make it rise. Yeast cells use the sugar in the dough for food and produce carbon dioxide gas as they feed.

Page 19: What are Fungi? Most fungi share three important characteristics: They are eukaryotes, use spores to reproduce, and are heterotrophs that feed in a similar.

The antibiotic penicillin resulted from the work of Alexander Fleming, who noticed that bacteria did not grow near a spot of mold in a petri dish.

Page 20: What are Fungi? Most fungi share three important characteristics: They are eukaryotes, use spores to reproduce, and are heterotrophs that feed in a similar.

A Lichen consists

of a Fungus and

an Alga that live together in a mutualistic relationship.

A + F = L