Chapter 31: Fungi(1) Flashcards

1
Q

Explain fungi nutrition and how they breakdown food.

A
  • Fungi are heterotrophs and absorb nutrients from outside of their bodies
  • Fungi use enzymes to break down a large variety of complex molecules into smaller organic compounds
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2
Q

What are the diverse forms of fungi?

A

Fungi exhibit diverse lifestyles
– decomposers
– parasites
– mutualists

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3
Q

Explain the structure of fungi.

A

The most common body structures are:
– multicellular filaments and
– single cells (yeasts)

  • Some species grow as either filaments or yeasts; others grow as both
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4
Q

Explain the body structures of fungi and its function

A
  • Fungi consist of mycelia, networks of branched hyphae adapted for absorption
  • Mycelia allows fungus to invade better areas nutritionally and also provides larger surface area for water and nutrient absorption
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5
Q

Fungal cell walls contain ______

A

Chitin

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6
Q

What is septa? Which fungi lacks septa?

A

Most fungi have hyphae divided into cells by septa, with pores allowing cell-to-cell movement of organelles.

Coenocytic fungi lack septa and have a continuous cytoplasmic mass with hundreds or thousands of nuclei.

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7
Q

What is mycorrhiza and what kind of specialized hyphae do they have?

A

Mycorrhizae are mutually beneficial
relationships between fungi and plant
roots

  • Haustoria – specialized hyphae that
    allow mycorrhizae to penetrate
    tissues of their host
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8
Q

What is ectomycorrhizal fungi?

A

Ectomycorrhizal fungi form sheaths of hyphae over a root and also grow into extracellular spaces of the root cortex

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9
Q

What kind of hyphae is present in arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi?

A

Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi extend hyphae through the cell walls of root cells

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10
Q

How does fungi communicate their mating type?

A

Fungi use sexual signaling molecules called pheromones to communicate their mating type

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11
Q

Define plasmogamy.

A

Plasmogamy is the union of cytoplasm from two parent mycelia

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12
Q

Define heterokaryon.

A

In most fungi, haploid nuclei from each parent do not fuse right away; they coexist in the mycelium, called a heterokaryon

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13
Q

What does dikaryotic mean?

A

In some fungi, haploid nuclei pair off two to a cell; such a mycelium is said to be dikaryotic

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14
Q

What is karyogamy?

A

Karyogamy – nuclear fusion of haploid nuclei from the two parents to form a diploid zygote

The period between plasmogamy and karyogamy varies (hours to centuries)

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15
Q

How do fungi produce genetic variation?

A

The paired processes of karyogamy and meiosis produce genetic variation

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16
Q

How do fungi reproduce asexually?

A

Many fungi can reproduce asexually

Moulds produce haploid spores by mitosis and form visible mycelia

17
Q

How does yeast reproduce?

A

Yeasts reproduce asexually
by

– simple cell division and
– pinching of “bud cells” from
a parent cell

18
Q

What are the diverse groups in fungi?

A
  1. Basidiomycetes
  2. Ascomycetes
  3. Gloromycetes
  4. zygomycetes
  5. Chytrids
19
Q

Explain chytrids

A
  • They can be decomposers, parasites, or mutualists
  • Molecular evidence supports the hypothesis that chytrids diverged early in fungal evolution
  • They have flagellated spores, called zoospores
20
Q

Explain zygomycetes.

A

They include fast-growing moulds, parasites, and commensal symbionts
– Ex: black bread mould (Rhizopus stolonifer)
* Its hyphae are coenocytic
* Asexual sporangia produce haploid spore