By Vanessa A, Emily A, and Vanessa C. - organisms that are not plants, animals, or fungi. -They share characteristics with the organisms in the other.
Chapter 31(2)
Fungi a.Chytridiomycota- Chytrids b. Zygomycota- Molds c. Glomeromycota- Arbuscular Mycorrhizae Alma Khan and Shannon Hayes.
Fungi are heterotrophs that acquire their nutrients by absorption. They absorb small organic molecules from the surrounding medium. Exoenzymes, powerful.
How do Fungi acquire nutients? They are Heterotrophs that get nutrition from absorption -- secretes hydrolytic enzymes into food then absorbs -- therefore.
Fungi are a huge and important component of the biosphere. Their diversity alone is staggering:although 100,000 species have been described, it is.
DO NOW: DO YOUR BEST TO REMEMBER SOME BIOLOGY 1 MATERIAL. QUESTION: WHAT DO THE TERMS “HAPLOID” AND “DIPLOID” MEAN? WHICH ARE YOU? Slime Molds: Fungus-Like.
The Protists Chapter 20. Protists General characteristics –Unicellular, colonial, simple multicellular organisms –Eukaryotic –Some exhibit both plant.
1 There’s a FUNGUS among us! Mycena lux-coeli. 2 Historically “true fungi” Oomycetes Slime Molds.
Fungi-What is that yellow blob. I.Introduction A.Early biologists used to think Fungus related to plant kingdom –1. relatively immobile –2. cell walls.
Evolution of multicellular plants. Fig 16.27 Evolution of a multicellular organism from a unicellular protist.
Fungi. Basic Information: Fungi are... - eukaryotes - mostly multicellular - sometimes unicellular (yeast) - very diverse with an estimated 1.5 million.