Fungi Lab: Michael Ngim Biosc 145 Dr. Dixon
Fungi Lab: Michael Ngim Biosc 145 Dr. Dixon
Fungi Lab: Michael Ngim Biosc 145 Dr. Dixon
Biosc 145
Dr. Dixon
Fungi Lab
Introduction:
Fungi are organisms that are classified in its own kingdom separating them from other
eukaryotic organisms such as plants or animals. Fungi evolved from unicellular protist ancestors
that contained flagellum similar to the existing choanoflagellates. What distinguishes fungi from
choanoflagellates are presence of chitin in their cell walls and fungi are absorptive heterotrophs.
Unlike plants they do not photosynthesize, they acquire food more like animals by absorbing
dissolved molecules and secreting digestive enzymes into their environment. The fungus
kingdom encompasses an enormous diversity of taxa with varied ecologies, life cycle strategies,
and morphologies ranging from unicellular aquatic chytrids to large mushrooms. In this lab we
will be focusing our efforts on specific categories of fungi zygomycote, ascomycote,
basidiomycote and lichens. These fungi are classified based on their sexual reproductive
structures that will be identified and discussed. The purpose of this lab is to be able to identify
structures and functions of fungi as well as examine processes of sexual and asexual
reproduction in the fungi kingdom.
Methods:
Zygomycota: Figure 1
Prepared slide of Rhizopus provided and examined with microscope at 400x with structures
identified.
Results/Data:
Basidiomycota:
Many of the Basidiomycetes are of great economic importance because of their beneficial as well
as harmful nature. Some of them are the causative agents of most destructive diseases of our
cereal crops. Some of the higher Basidiomycetes such as the pore fungi are the common wood
rotters. They destroy lumbar and timber. Mushrooms which also belong to this group are of great
economic value as food. The toad stools, however, are poisonous. Some of these such as
Amanita are fatally poisonous whereas others cause only discomfort. Many members of this
class form ectotrophic mycorrhizal associations with the roots of forest trees. The association is
mutually beneficial. The fungus obtains sugars and other organic substances from the roots of the
tree partner whereas the mantle of the fungal partner serves to pass on nitrogen, phosphorus, and
other elements absorbed by the mycelium to the root. The club fungi get their names from the
fruiting structures of what we think of in mushrooms called basidiomata. The puff ball structures
are found in damp places on trees and fallen logs. Basidiomycota play an important role in
returning carbon to the carbon cycle. This fungus has septa with small distinct pores and the
basidia is the swollen head of specialized hypha is the characteristic sexual reproductive
structure. Similar to the ascus in ascomycota the basidium is the site of nuclear fission and
meiosis. In the gills of the club fungi they are line with basidium and haploid basidiospores
forming from the basidium. The basidiospores are ejected out to and germinate hyphae with
haploid nuclei, after these hyphae grow haploid hyphae of different mating types will begin to
fuse or mate together and grow dikaryotic hypha each cell containing two nuclei one from each
parent hypha. When triggered by an environmental stimulus the dikaryotic mycelium produces a
basidioma (fruiting structure) which houses more basidium and basidiospores for germination f
the next generation. In figure 4 with the coprinus we can see the gills and the basidiospores
forming on the hyphae. In figure 5A and 5Bwe can see the gills with the dissection microscope
but are unable to see the basidiospores at the end of the gills.
Lichens:
A lichen is a mixture of a fungus and a photosynthetic organism. This symbiotic relationship
allows lichens to grow and survive in the harshest of environments for instance Antarctica
habitats. Lichens are unable to excrete toxic substances which make them a good indicator of
pollution which is why they are not found in industrialized regions or city environments. The
fungal components of lichen are sac fungi and the photosynthetic portion is often unicellular
green algae or Cyanobacterium or both. Lichens are found in diverse habitats like tree bark, on
rocks and open soil. They come in different forms including crustose (crust like), foliose (leafy)
and fruticose (shrubby). Also, in Physia figure 6A the dark layer along the top is an apothecium.
An apothecium is a fungal reproductive structure, that the fungus reproduces itself through the
production of spores. These spores will disperse and germinate into new fungi, but they
will not produce new lichens. The fungal partner can go through its sexual cycle producing
haploid spores. For a lichen to reproduce, but the fungus and the alga must disperse together.
Lichens reproduce in two basic ways. One way is for a lichen to produce soredia, or a cluster of
algal cells wrapped in fungal filaments. These may disperse and form new lichens. The second
way for the lichen to reproduce itself is through isidia, which are much like soredia except that
isidia are enclosed within a layer of protective cortex tissue. An isidium is much more like a
miniature lichen.
References:
1. Sadava, David E. Life. the Science of Biology. 9th ed., Sinauer Associates, 2011.
2. Chris, T. (2017). Lab Manual for BioSc 145 (Organismal Biology).
3. M., Van De Graaff Kent, and John L. Crawley. A Photographic Atlas for the Biology
Laboratory. Morton Pub. Co., 2009.