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Page 1: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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Fungi

Page 2: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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The scarlet hood (Hygrocybe coccinea)2002 Prentice Hall, Inc

Fungi are absorptive heterotrophs that secrete digestive enzymes andare major decomposers of dead organic material

Page 3: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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Red algae

Green algae

Land plants

FungiChoanoflagellates

Myxozoa

Animals

2002 Prentice Hall, Inc

Page 4: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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OrganizationMost fungi are haploid

Some are unicellular (yeasts)

But most constructed of hyphae that forms an interwoven mat called mycelium

• Most fungi are multicellular; however some hyphae without septa consist of a continuous cytoplasmic mass with multiple nuclei

Fungi mycelia can be huge. One giant individual of Armillariaostoyae spreads through 2,200 acres of forest, hundreds of tons of weight and thousands of years old

Reproductive structures are only thick and fleshy portions; theyare not absorptive

Page 5: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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2002 Prentice Hall, Inc

138 µm 3.73 µm

Page 6: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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Hyphae

Reproductivestructure

Mycelium

SeptaCell wall

Pore

926 nm

(a)

(b)

2002 Prentice Hall, Inc

Page 7: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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Page 8: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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HomeostasisCell walls mainly of chitin, strong but flexible nitrogen-containing polysaccharide*

Use of glycogen to store excess carbohydrates*

Haustoria: hyphal tips in parasitic fungi that penetrate tissues in host

Filamentous structure of mycelium provides extensive surface area for efficient absorption

Fungal mycelia are nonmotile

No flagella on cells; except in species of the phylum Chytridiomycota which have gametes and spores that are flagellated*

Spores developed when food is lacking; dispersal mechanism

Page 9: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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Reproduction and Heredity

Fungi reproduce by releasing spores produced sexually or asexually

Nuclei of fungal hyphae haploid

Transient diploid stages during sexual cycles

Fungi with sexual cycles go through several stages: plasmogamy (fusion of cytoplasm), heterokaryotic stage, karyogamy (fusion of nuclei), zygote, mycelium

Page 10: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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Page 11: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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Growth and development

Mycelium grows in the direction in which food is more abundant

It grows rapidly, adding as much as a kilometer per day

Fast growth possible since proteins and other synthesized materials are channeled by cytoplasmic streaming to tips of hyphae

Fungi concentrate energy and resources in adding length

Page 12: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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Metabolism

Fungi are heterotrophs. They obtain energy and carbon from other organisms through absorption

Diffusion in hyphae is restricted for small molecules, thus fungi secrete digestive enzymes to break down large molecules. Digestion occurs outside the hyphae (extracellularly)

Fungi can digest lignin, cellulose, many other large and small molecules

Page 13: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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Ecology70,000 species known. Each year 1000 new species are identified. It is estimated that 1.65 million species of fungi may exist

Mutualism between plants/fungi

• Mycorrhizae – fungal associations with plant roots; may be the most important cooperative relationships in terms of productivity and richness; plants deliver sugars and other reduced carbon compounds to fungi

• Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate forests; abundant in cold, northern habitats with short growing seasons; deliver nitrogen to plants; they are often members of Basidiomycota.

• Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) – grow into cells of plant root tissue; branching of hyphae is extensive; occur on 80% of all land plant species; dominant in grasslands and warm tropical forests where growing season is long; deliver phosphorus to plants; often members of Zygomycota

Page 14: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF)

Rootcells

EMF

2002 Prentice Hall, Inc

Page 15: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF)

AMF

Rootcells

Roothair

2002 Prentice Hall, Inc

Page 16: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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Ecology cont.

Mutualism (cont.)

• Lichens – associations of fungi with cyanobacteria or green algae

• Usually an ascomycete; photosynthetic organisms provide sugars, reduced carbons, and nitrogen (some of them) fungi provide protection through chitin walls; relationship may turn parasitic (fungi kills algal cells)

Parasitism

• Some fungi are destructive to plants and animals; yeast infections, athlete’s foot, dutch elm disease

Page 17: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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Asexual reproductionoccurs when “mini-lichens”are produced.

Asciproduced byfungus

Fungal layer

Fungal layer

Algal layer

Substrate

2002 Prentice Hall, Inc

Page 18: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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2002 Prentice Hall, Inc

Page 19: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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ImportanceFungi are essential to maintaining global carbon cycle

• They digest cellulose and lignin (carbon captured by plants) and break into glucose and CO2, allowing carbon to be recycled to other organisms

Diversity of mycorrhizal fungi affects diversity and productivity of plant communities

Fungi can cause important loss of million of dollars through food spoilage, crop losses and habitat destruction

However they also provide million dollar industries by facilitating bread making (Saccharomyces cerevisiae), fermentation to produce beer, wine and spirits (Saccharomyces spp), and by production of edible mushrooms

Yeasts are important research organisms in cell and molecular biology

Page 20: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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2002 Prentice Hall, Inc

Page 21: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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AtmosphericCO2

CO2 from plant andanimal respiration

Assimilation ofCO2 by plants

CO2 fromdegradationof lignin

Fungal myceliaGlucose from degradation of

cellulose transferred to fungivoreslike insect larvae, ants, and squirrels

2002 Prentice Hall, Inc

Page 22: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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2002 Prentice Hall, Inc

Page 23: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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Diversity of Fungi

Fungi can be divided into four major groups basedon molecular data and differences in their reproductive structures.

• Chytridiomycota: aquatic with flagellated spores and gametes. They reproduce sexually and asexually.

• Zygomycota: mycelia that "yoke together" during reproduction. Most are soil living, many form mutualistic associations with plants. Hyphae are haploid

Page 24: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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Chytridium

Page 25: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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Rhizopus

Page 26: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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Pilobolus

Page 27: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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Diversity of Fungi

Fungi can be divided into four major groups based onmolecular data and differences in their reproductive structures.

• Basidiomycota:

• Reproductive structures are mushrooms, puffballs, or bracket fungi.

• Meiosis and spore formation occurs in basidia, which are like "little pedestals.“

• They have heterokaryotic stage

Page 28: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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Page 29: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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Diversity of Fungi

Fungi can be divided into four major groups based onmolecular data and differences in their reproductive structures.

• Ascomycota:

• Reproductive structures are ascocarps

• Meiosis and spore formation occurs in asci,which are elongated sacs.

• Also forms heterokaryotic stage

• Inhabit variety of marine, freshwater and terrestrial habitats

Page 30: WELCOME TO BIOLOGY 2002 - University of Texas at Austin 11.pdf · • Ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) - dense network of hyphae around plant roots; found in all trees in boreal and temperate

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