Chapter 21 Fungi Flashcards
Main features of Fungi
Heterotrophic Multicellular Made up of hyphae Hyphae form mycelium Walls made of chitin
Saprophytic fungi
Eat dead organic matter
Most fungi are sacrophytic
Recycle nutrients
Eg. Mushrooms and mould
Parasitic
Absorb their food from living organisms
Causes harm to /weakens hosts
Eg. Athletes foot and ringworm
Types of parasites:
- Obligate
- Facultative
- Symbiotic
- Live on host but doesn’t kill
Eg. Athletes foot and ringworm - Kills the host and feeds on remains.
Eg. Fungi on fruit - Both benefit
Rhizopus structure
Sporangio spores Sporangio phore Columella Apophysis Sporangium Stolon Hyphae Rhizoids Mycelium Substrate
Function of:
- Hyphae
- Rhizoids
- Stolon
- Sporangiophore
- Digest substrate
- More surface for absorption of digested material
- Aerial hyphae allows rhizopus to grow sideways
- Aerial hyphae allows rhizopus to grow up and reproduce
Describe Asexual reproduction of rhizopus
- Sporangiophore grows up from substrate after a couple of days.
- Grows a sporangium.
- Cells divide by mitosis to produce spores. Apophysis supports columella, which feeds the spores.
- Sporangium dries out and releases spores.
- Each spore grows into a new hyphae if it lands on a suitable substrate
Sexual reproduction in rhizopus
Can only occur between +hypha and -hypha.
- Hyphae of opposite strains grow close together.
- Swellings form and touch.
- Nuclei from hyphae move into swellings. Called progametangia.
- Cross walls form, producing a gametangia.
- The walls of the gametangia dissolve. Fertilisation takes place. Produces diploid zygote nuclei.
- A zygospore forms around the nuclei.
- When conditions suitable, the zygospore germinates by meiosis.
- A hyphae grows and produces a sporangium. Spores develop and are released.
Features of yeast
Tiny
Unicellular
Round
Structure of yeast
Food vacuole Nucleus Vacuole- large for storage Cytoplasm Cell wall-made of chitin
Describe reproduction in yeast
Asexual- budding
1. Nuclei of parent divides by mitosis
2. A swelling (bud) forms on the side.
3. One of the nuclei enters the bud.
4. The bud separates and becomes a new individual cell.
In some cases the bud does not separate but can itself bud. This forms a colony
Benefits of fungi
Yeast used to make bread and alcohol.
As a source of food. Eg. Mushrooms
Harmful effects of fungi
Causes animal diseases. Eg. Athletes foot and ringworm.
Spoils food. Eg. Rhizopus
Attacks crops
Edible and poisonous fungi examples
Edible:
Field mushrooms
Morel
Truffle(below ground)
Poisonous:
Death cap mushroom
Destroying Angel mushroom
Causes damage to liver and intestine.
What does aseptic and sterile mean? And name an example
Aseptic: Measures to exclude unwanted microorganisms.
Sterile: Is an environment where all microorganisms are destroyed.
Eg. Flaming the forceps. Cleaning the bench. Washing hands.