Essential Information & explanations, latest texts & monographs on
Fungi.
National Audubon Society Field Guide to Mushrooms by NATIONAL AUDUBON SOCIETY
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The Mold Survival Guide: For Your Home and for Your Health by Jeffrey C. May
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The Complete Mushroom Book : Savory Recipes and Field Guide by Antonio Carluccio
Mushrooms of Northeast North America: Midwest to New England by George Barron
The Mushroom Hunter's Field Guide by Alexander H Smith
Medically Important Fungi: A Guide to Identification by Davise H. Larone
A Field Guide to Mushrooms : North America by Kent H. McKnight
Magic Mushrooms by Peter Stafford
Medical Mycology: A Self-Instructional Text by Martha E. Kern
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Trees and Nonflowering Plants (North American Wildlife) by Readers Digest
The biology of fungi by C. T. Ingold
Fungus(Redirected from Fungi)
Fungi
Scientific_classification
Domain:Eukaryota
Kingdom:Fungi
Divisions
Chytridiomycota
Zygomycota
Ascomycota
Basidiomycota
The Fungi (singular: fungus) are a large group of organisms ranked as a kingdom within the Domain Eukaryota. Included are the conspicuous mushrooms, but also many microscopic forms such as molds and yeasts. Some 70,000 species have been described, and perhaps 1.5 million species actually exist, with the majority yet to be identified and described by mycologists (Hawksworth, 1991; Hawksworth et al., 1995). The fungi have undergone substantial changes in the arrangement of the various taxa in the last several decades, especially as techniques for comparing biochemical characteristics (such as ribosomal RNA and DNA) have become increasingly more sophisticated. The phylogeny presented here is after Bruns et al. (1991, 1993) for the Eumycota (true fungi) and recognizes four divisions: the Chytridiomycota (chytrids), Zygomycota (conjugating fungi including bread moulds), Ascomycota (sac fungi, including common moulds, cup fungi) and Basidiomycota (club fungi).
Fungi occur in all environments on the planet and include important decomposers and parasites. Parasitic fungi infect animals, including humans, other mammals, birds, and insects, with results varying from mild itching to death. Other parasitic fungi infect plants, causing diseases such as butt rot and making trees more vulnerable to toppling. The vast majority of vascular plants are associated with mutualistic fungi, called mycorrhizae, which assist their roots in absorption of nutrients and water. Some fungi are used as food, such as Shiitake mushrooms and Mexican Corn Smut; others are extremely poisonous (see Mushroom poisoning).
Table of contents showTocToggle("show","hide")
1 Structure
2 Reproduction
2.1 Sexual
2.2 Asexual
3 Nutrition and ecology
3.1 Pathogenic species
4 Related and similar groups
5 Miscellaneous
6 References
7 External links
Structure
Fungi have a vegetative body called a thallus or soma and composed of one-cell-thick filaments called hyphae (singular: hypha). These generally form a microscopic network within the substrate (food source) called the mycelium, through which food is absorbed. Usually the most conspicuous part of a fungus are fruiting bodies — the reproductive structures that produce spores.
Division of hyphae into cells is either incomplete, in which case they are called septate and the dividing walls are called septa (singular: septum), or absent, in which case they are called coenocytic. Fungi generally have cell walls made from chitin and other materials. The hyphae may be modified to produce highly specialized cellular-scale structures. For instance, fungi that parasitize plants grow haustoria that pierce the plant cells and digest the substances on the inside; some soil-dwelling fungi trap roundworms and other small animals.
Most chytrids, which are generally considered the most primitive group of fungi, do not form hyphae and instead grow directly from spores into multinucleate sporangia. A few other fungi have reverted from a mycelial to a unicellular organization. These are the yeasts, which belong among the ascomycetes, and the Microsporidia, a group of reduced parasites whose relationships to the other fungi are uncertain.
Reproduction
Sexual
Fungal mycelia are typically haploid. When mycelia of different mating types meet, they produce two multinucleate ball-shaped cells, which form a mating bridge. The result is that nuclei move from one mycelium into the other, forming a heterokaryon (meaning different nuclei). This is called plasmogamy. Actual fusion to form diploid nuclei is called karyogamy, and may not occur until sporangia are formed.
In the Zygomycota, the heterokaryon produces multiple fruiting bodies, in the form of minuscule stalks with sporangia at the end. Most ascomycetes produce fruiting bodies called ascocarps, composed entirely of hyphae. These are usually bowl- or cup-shaped, but some have sponge-like structures. On the inside of the cup, each hypha terminates in an ascus, which produces eight spores.
In the Basidiomycota, the heterokaryon produces a new mycelium which may live for years without producing a fruiting body. The familiar mushrooms are examples of these. They usually have a stalk, composed mainly of hyphae, and a cap, under which there are sheetlike structures called gills. On the surface of each gill there are numerous hyphal cells called basidia, with several spores on the end of each.
Asexual
Fungi may also reproduce asexually, for instance through the production of spores called conidia (Greek for dust), which form at the tips of specialized hyphae called conidiophores. In some fungi sexual reproduction has been lost, or is unknown. These were originally grouped as the form division Deuteromycota, or the Fungi imperfecti, since the means of sexual reproduction was the primary means of classifying fungi, but are now classified with their ancestral group.
Except among the chytrids, where spores are propelled by a posterior flagellum, all fungal spores are non-motile. They develop into new mycelia, which invade some substrate and repeat the life cycle. These may become very large, often several square metres in size; fairy rings are an example.
Nutrition and ecology
Fungi are heterotrophic, that is they get their energy by breaking down organic molecules, and cannot synthesize organic molecules from inorganic substances like plants. They feed by secreting exoenzymes into the surrounding substrate. Exoenzymes act like the digestive enzymes of animals, breaking apart large organic molecules, but function outside the organism. The smaller organic molecules are then absorbed by the fungal cells.
Two main ecological niches occupied by fungi are that of the decomposer (detritivore) or saprophyte, and that of the parasite. The only difference between detritivorous and parasitic fungi is that the latter grow on living organisms, while the former grow on dead organisms. Many decomposer fungi live as mycorrhizae, in mutualistic relationships with plants. Some of the detritivorous fungi are also considered "facultative parasites," growing on weakened or dying organisms. Among the parasitic fungi are species which are insectivorous or helminthivorous (worm-eating). Some insectivorous species produce sticky substances which trap insects, while the worm-eating fungi produce substances which drug and immobilize worms, which are then consumed.
Some fungi, usually ascomycetes, live as lichens. A lichen is a very close mutualistic relationship between a fungus and a photosynthetic microorganism, usually a cyanobacterium or green alga. A lichen behaves in so many ways like a single organism that lichens are actually given genus and species names.
Pathogenic species
Fungal diseases include:
Fungal infections may also be a factor in causing specific replant disease.
A fungal infection of the human body is called a mycosis. Mycoses are particularly severe in the case of immunodeficient patients, such as those suffering from AIDS.
Related and similar groups
Fungi are generally believed to have evolved from the same group of flagellates that gave rise to animals and choanoflagellates. These groups are known as opisthokonts; similarities include the
structure of flagella, when present, and the formation of chitin in a number of different lines.
The water molds, of which potato blight is the best known example, show a hyphal organization and were once considered fungi. However they, and the closely related hypochytrids, are not actually related to the true fungi and instead belong among a group called the stramenopiles, together with the golden algae, diatoms, brown algae and allies. The chytrids were also formerly excluded from the fungi due to the presence of flagellated spores, but are of definite relation to the others and so are now usually treated with them.
Slime molds were also originally placed here, because they produce fruiting bodies, but are now recognized to be several distinct groups of amoeboids.
Miscellaneous
The seeds of many orchids require a fungus to germinate.
Fungi of the genus Penicillium produce penicillin, the first antibiotic known to modern science. Many bacteria have since become resistant to penicillin, but it is still used against Streptococcus and other very dangerous germs.
Other fungi include:
References
- Bruns, T. D., T. J. White, and J. W. Taylor. 1991. Fungal molecular systematics. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 22:525-564.
- Bruns, T. D., R. Vilgalys, S. M. Barns, D. Gonzalez, D. S. Hibbett, D. J. Lane, L. Simon, S. Stickel, T. M. Szaro, W. G. Weisburg, and M. L. Sogin. 1993. Evolutionary relationships within the fungi: analysis of nuclear small subunit rRNA sequences. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 1:231 241.
- Hawksworth, D. L. 1991. The fungal dimension of biodiversity: magnitude, significance, and conservation. Mycological Research 95:641-655.
- Hawksworth, D. L., P. M. Kirk, B. C. Sutton, and D. N. Pegler. 1995. Ainsworth and Bisby's Dictionary of the Fungi (8th Ed.). CAB International, Wallingford, United Kingdom. 616p.
External links
The above article is adapted from from Wikipedia All Wikipedia article text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License
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