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 | Mycology:  The
  Study of Fungi1  Including Some Bacteria and Slime Molds (Contact)        Please CLICK on underlined links & included
  illustrations for details;          Use Ctrl/F to search for
  Subject Matter:   (Future taxonomic changes will require
  agreement among specialists)   
     Introduction            Mycology is of importance in foreign
  explorations for natural enemies of invading plants and insects
  especially.  There have been some
  significant successes in Biological Weed Control and it is important to
  recognize if potential arthropod importations may be infected with a
  pathogen.  The following should
  acquaint explorers with a general knowledge of what organisms may be present
  as they go about their searches for potential biological control candidates.            Sections on Schizomycophyta,
  Amoebozoa
  and Eumycophyta
  follows the classification that prevailed from the latter third of the 20th
  Century until the present.  The
  arrangement of the various subgroups is based on the presumed evolution of the most primitive to the more highly
  advanced organisms with previous names of groups being included in
  parentheses.  Although further
  rearrangements are expected as more biological and biochemical data are
  forthcoming the presented design should enable identification of major
  orders, families and genera. Emphasis has been placed on morphological and
  behavioral characteristics, and a simple diagrammatic style is used for most
  of the illustrations. A binocular microscope with a 20X magnification is
  advisable for students wishing to view living and preserved specimens.  Greater detail on a particular group of
  fungi may be found by referring to publications listed in the References or through
  Internet searches.             This is a self-contained database
  with a minimum of links outside its limits. 
  Independent Internet searches are encouraged for greater detail on
  particular fungal or bacterial groups, close contact with professional
  mycologists is required.   Background &
  Overview            The first scientific effort to classify
  the fungi was made by Anton De Bary in 1860. 
  He divided the fungi into four groups:  Saprophytes
  (nutrients derived from dean organic material), Facultative Parasites (able to become parasitic but generally
  saprophytic, Facultative Saprophytes
  (able to become saprophytic but generally parasitic, and Parasites (only able to survive on a
  living host).              
  Mycology was originally a branch of botany, but fungi are
  evolutionarily more closely related to animals than to plants albeit this was
  not widely accepted until the late 20th Century.  There have been
  many schemes developed to classify organisms (see Systems & Kingdoms) and fungi in
  particular.  Two contemporary proposals
  to classify fungi are shown in Table
  1 & Table 2.  Historically, the bacteria and slime molds were also
  included under the broad group "Fungi" until they were separated
  into "Kingdoms" of their own (Table
  1)  (Also See Wikipedia).  All of these are alike in one
  respect:  they lack chlorophyll and
  thus cannot make their own food. 
  They, like animals, depend for their food either directly or
  indirectly on green plants.             The following sections discuss
  diagnostic structures that aid in the identification of the major organism
  groups in an arrangement that begins with primitive forms and proceeds to the
  more advanced.  Included are Bacteria
  (Monera, Schizomycophyta), Slime Molds (Amoebozoa), and
  the True Fungi
  (Eumycophyta) and their
  principal Classes: Zygomycota
  (zygote fungi), Ascomycota (sac fungi), Basidiomycota (higher fungi), and
  Deuteromycota (Fungi Imperfecti).  Representative Genera and some species of
  major families are included.  Of
  special interest is that sexual processes that appear throughout these groups
  gradually disappear as they ascend the evolutionary ladder.  The systematic study of these organisms is
  scarcely two hundred years old, but humans have known the manifestations of
  this group of organisms for thousands of years.  Yet today few realize how intimately our lives are linked with
  them.  They plan such an important
  role in the slow but constant changes taking place around us because of their
  ubiquity and their amazingly large numbers. 
  They are the agents responsible for much of the disintegration of
  organic matter, and as such they affect us directly by destroying food and
  fiber and other goods that are manufactured from raw materials subject to
  their attack.  They cause the majority
  of plant diseases and man7y diseases of animals and humans.  They are the basis of a number of
  industrial processes involving fermentation, such as making wines, bread,
  beers and even the fermentation of the cacao bean and the preparation of
  certain cheese.  They are deployed in
  the commercial preparation of many organic acids and of some vitamins, and
  are responsible for the manufacture of a number of antibiotic drugs, notably
  penicillin.  Fungi in particular are
  both destructive and beneficial to agriculture.  On the one hand they do extensive damage to crops by causing
  plant disease, while on the other they increase the fertility of the soil by
  inducing various changes that eventually result in the release of plant
  nutrients in a form available to green plants.  Their widespread use as edible food in the form of mushrooms
  also should not be overlooked.   =============================   The fungi rank prominently in numbers of
  species among organisms. 
  Comparison  estimates of some species as of 2020 are noted as follows:             Cyanophyta (Cyanobacteria) = 1,800
  species           Euglenophyta
  (Euglenozoa) – Flagellate protozoa = 350 species           Chlorophyta (Green algae) = 3,250 species           Protista (Chrysophyta) (Golden
  algae)= 5,225 species           Phacophyta (Protista—Brown algae)
  = 1,675 species           Rhodophyta (Red algae) = 2,810
  species           Dinoflagellata  (Pyrophyta -- fire algae) = 1,215 species           Monera (Bacteria)  (Shizomycophyta --  = 2,200 species           Protista (Myxomycophyta) = 535
  species           Eumycophyta (Eumycetes) – True
  fungi = 142,000 species           Bryiophyta  (Mosses) = 28,000            Tracheophyta (Vascular plants) =
  380,000 (most likely many more species exist)             The five main
  food sources that are required by fungi are Carbon, Nitrogen, Minor elements,
  Vitamins (Thiamin & Biotin) and Oxygen. 
  The main carbon source is Sucrose, but one group, the Mucorales, is
  unable to use it as a source of carbon.   Main Groups of Fungi            Zygomycota (Phycomycetes) -- zygote fungi           Ascomycota (Ascomycetes) -- sac fungi           Basidiomycota (Basidiomycetes) --  higher fungi           Deuteromycota (Deuteromycetes or Fungi
  Imperfecti) – anamorphic fungi     General Characteristics of Fungi            
  The fungi are a group of living organisms that do not possess
  chlorophyll.  They resemble green
  plants as generally they have definite cells walls, they are usually
  nonmotile, although they may have motile reproductive cells, and they
  reproduce by means of spores.  They do
  not have stems, roots or leaves, nor dor they have a vascular system as the
  more advanced types of plants.  Fingi
  are usually filamentous and multicellular;
  their nuclei can be seen with relative ease; their somatic structures with
  few exceptions show little differentiation and practically no division of
  labor.            
  The filaments that make up the body of a fungus elongate by apical
  growth (Plate 51).  However,
  most parts of an organism are capable of growth, and a tiny fragment from
  almost any port of the fungus is enough to start a new individual.  Reproductive structures are differentiated
  from somatic structures and show a variety of forms, which are useful for
  identification.  Few fungi may be identified
  if their reproductive stages are not available.  This is becuase with few exceptions the somatic parts of fungi
  resemble those of many other fungi.            
  The fungi obtain their food either by infecting living organisms, by
  behaving as parasites, or by attacking dead organic matter.  Most fungi, whether normally parasitic or
  not, are able to live on dead organic matter, which makes it possible to grow
  them on synthetic media.  Fungi that
  live on dead matter are unable to infect living organisms and are referred to
  as obligate saprobes.  Those capable
  of inciting disease or of living on dea organic matter are referred to as
  facultative parasites or facultative saprobes.  Those that require living protoplasm are obligate
  parasites.  Fungi also differ from
  most plants in that they require already elaborated food to live and are
  incapable of manufacturing their own. 
  But, if provided with carbohydrates in some form most fungi can
  synthesize their own proteins by utilizing inorganic or organic sources of
  nitrogen.  Many fungi can synthesize
  vitamins, which they need to grow and reproduce as do other organisms.  Excess food is usually stored in the form
  of glycogen or oil.            
  Fungi vary in their food requirements.  Some are omnivorous and can live on anything that contains
  organic matter.  Other fungi are more
  restricted in their diet and a few of the obligate parasites not only require
  living protoplasm but are also highly specializes as to the species and even
  the variety of host they parasitize. 
  Enzymes determine what foods are able to be used.   The Fungus Vegetative Body            The mycelium is
  the entire vegetative body of a single thalus.  It is composed of thread-like structures or hyphae.  The diameter of a hypha varies between 2
  and 50 microns.  Branching occurs
  behind the tip, there being some degree of apical dominance.  Walls in the Zygomycota (Phycomycetes) are
  principally of cellulose,
  while in the other groups the walls may contain a combination of cellulose
  and fungus
  chitin.  The mycelial type
  of thallus is not present in many of the lowest members of fungi, and a few
  degenerate forms in the higher fungi also lack it.             Occasionally, as in the
  Zygomycota, a single hypha will compose the entire mycelium and cross walls
  will form at random.  The absence of
  cross walls is known as coenocytic, and is also characteristic of the
  Zygomycota.             Septa
  are the cross walls and are characteristic of the higher true fungi (Plate 52b).  In some species a pore (hole) is left in the septa and protoplasm
  is continuous from cell to cell of the hypha.             In the Basidiomycota
  (Basidiomycetes) a characteristic feature is that a clamp
  is formed, and the septa do not reach to the end of the diameter.               All true
  fungi (Eumycophyta) have well-defined nuclei.  In the coenocytic condition there may be nuclei distributed
  throughout the hypha (Plate
  52a).  When mycelia occur
  in the Phycomycota they are characteristically of the coenocytic type.  Septations (cross-walls in the hyphae) are
  almost entirely lacking.               Vacuoles
  and food particles and
  oil droplets also
  are distributed throughout the mycelium. 
  Again in the coenocytic condition nuclei may or may not (usually not)
  exhibit conjugate nuclear dividion.               In a septate
  mycelium (with or without septal pores),
  some species may have many nuclei distributed in one cell (multinucleate).  Other species may have two nuclei per cell
  (dicaryotic).  A dicaryotic cell will usually exhibit conjugate
  nuclear division, which is the simultaneous division of the two
  nuclei in a dicaryon.  This gives rise
  to four daughter nuclei.  These
  generally become separated by a septum into two cells, the sister nuclei
  migrating into different daughter cells.              Also, in the septate
  condition (septa =
  “cross wall”), the two hyphae will fuse (hyphal anastomosis).  This may occur between hyphae on the same
  mycelium or on two closely related species. 
  In this condition the nuclei may migrate over the “bridge.”  Further division may result in daughter
  nuclei migrating through septal pores to adjoining cells.  This results in a heterocaryotic
  effect, which is where there are different nuclei in the
  mycelium.  It allows for a
  recombination of characters.  Most
  Ascomycota, Basidiomycota and Deuteromycota form mycelia the hyphae of which
  are divided by septa.               All hyphae
  do not have the same growth rate. 
  Nevertheless, some forces keep the total margin at an even level               Stolons are
  parts of hyphae that skip across the substrate surface.  At points of contact with the substrate,
  growth is stimulated and hyphae will penetrate the substrate.  These penetrating hyphae are then called rhizoids.               In some Basidiomycota
  (Basidiomycetes) a bunch of horizontal hyphae will form a cable over
  the substrate (rhizomorphs).  This is typified in Armelaria, the
  “shoe-string fungus.”  The outer edge of the hyphae forms a thick
  cell wall.  Its function is believed
  to be the transportation of water across dry areas.  The cables are usually large enough to be readily viewed
  without a microscope and resemble small roots of a seed plant.       Often
  the fruiting
  bodies will arise from rhizomorphs,
  which is particular true of stinkhorn fungi.             Sclerotia
  (sing. = sclerotium) is a very dense, heavy-packed group of hyphae
  surrounded by a thick wall (Plate 56a,b).  They are usually found in the higher fungi,
  and in certain genera and species they can be of considerable size.  The outer hyphae are usually thick-walled
  so that the whole structure appears firm and hard.  The color is mostly brown or blackish even though the rest of
  the mycelium may be white.  Sclerotia
  may store food and serve as resistant vegetative resting structures when they
  occur (Plate 56c,d).               Haustoria
  are usually found among the obligate parasites where they occur in the intercellular
  hyphae (= a protuberance that dissolves the host cell wall and
  develop into the cell (Plate 53).  There are various kinds and they serve as
  identification characters for certain species.  Naturally they do not occur in an intracellular parasite.  Some Eumycophyta are not myceliar and are
  characterized by a single cell (e.g., yeasts).                  [Please
  see PLATE 1 and PLATE 2 for additional examples of fungal
  vegetative bodies.]     Nature &
  Reproduction of The Fungi  History            Ancient cultures were well aware
  of fungi, but they knew mainly the fleshy kinds.  They did not associate the parasitic forms, such as rusts and
  mildews, with disease.  They were
  often amazed at the rapidity of growth. 
  Theophrastus
  (3-4 BCE) believed that fungi were plants without roots, stems and
  leaves.  The Greeks and Romans formed
  the spontaneous generation idea of fungus origins.  Pliny (1 AD) proposed that lightening and thunder were
  implicated in the rise of fungi.  He
  observed “fairy rings
  of fungi,”
  which are actually the expanding mycelium.               Anton DeBary in 1850 noted that
  fungi develop from spores.  Franz Unger in
  1840 advocated that fungi were associated with disease and were the results of disease.  He believed that the “morbid sap” of the host was
  transformed into the fungus.               Micheli in Florence, Italy
  published Novum
  Plantarum Genera in 1729.  He described fungi along with other plants in this book, but he
  did not believe in spontaneous generation. 
  He thought that fungi also had seeds (viewed their powdery
  spores).  In a classic experiment he
  used two sterile melons, which he placed under bell jars.  He inoculated one and left the other as a
  control.  Mycelia developed on the
  inoculated portion, which he compared with that of the parent.  He repeated the experiment several times
  and concluded that because of their lightness, fungal spores were in the air
  at all times.  In a second experiment
  he seeded an area in the leaf mat of a forest with non-indigenous species of
  mushroom.  Later he observed mycelium
  and still later the fruiting bodies.              Reproduction in the fungi is
  varied and sometimes very complex.  A sexual
  process, or the equivalent, is often involved.  However the fungi are noted for the diversity of means they
  possess for asexual reproduction.   -------------------------------------------               Some fungi employ fragmentation of
  hyphae as a means of propagation.  The
  hyphae break up into their component cells, called oidia, which behave like spores
  (Plate 57a).  If the cells become enveloped in a thick
  wall before they separate from each other or from other hyphal cells
  adjoining the, they are called chlamydospores (Plate 57b).  Fragmentation may also occur accidentally
  by the breaking off of parts of the mycelium through external forces.  Such pieces of mycelium under favorable
  conditions can start a new individual. 
  Laboratory propagation is frequently made from mycelial
  fragments.  Fission can occur through
  the simple splitting of a cell into two daughter cells by constriction.  This is found among the bacteria
  generally, but some fungal yeasts may do this also (Plate 58a).             Budding is the asexual
  production of a small outgrowth from a parent cell.  The bud increases in size while still attached to the parent
  cell.  It eventually breaks off and
  forms a new individual (Plate 58b).  Sometimes chains of buds form a short
  mycelium.  Most yeasts have budding,
  but it also occurs in many other fungi at different phases of their life
  history or under certain conditions of growth.             The commonest method of asexual
  reproduction in fungi is by means of spores. 
  Spores vary in color, size, shape, number of cells and the way that
  the spores themselves are borne (Plate 58b)   -------------------------------------------               Spores are
  small, detachable bodies, with either one or more cells and capable of
  germinating (Plate 54).  Most fiungi produce these small detachable
  bodies, the function of which might be compared to that of seeds in higher
  plants.  Although there are many spore
  types in the fungi, this discussion will stress basically five different
  types:  Conidia,
  Sprangiospores, Zoospores (Planospores), Ascospores and
  Basidiospores.  Other types include aeciospores,
  uredospores,
  pycnospores,
  etc. 
  Nevertheless, a number of fungi form more than one type , e.g., both
  ascospores and conidiospores), usually at different stages in their
  development.  The spores may be either
  colored or hyaline and exhibit a variety of shapes.  They are frequently unicellular but may be two- or more celled.  Some fungi bear them on or within a fruiting body,
  which consists of a dense aggregation of hyphae.  The spore output of some fungi is in the millions or even
  billions of spores being produced by a single individual.  They are distributed in a variety of ways,
  but when they travel by air currents they can be the source of severe allergies as
  they are breathed in and begin to germinate on the linings of respiratory
  systems in humans and animals.             During some stages of the life
  history of most fungi the mycelium becomes organized into loosely or
  compactly woven tissues as distinguished from the loose hyphae ordinarily
  making up the thallus.  The general
  term plectenchyma is
  used to designate all organized fungal tissues. Two types of plectenchyma are
  prosenchyma,
  which is a loosely woven tissue where the component hyphae lie mostly
  parallel to one another and their typically elongated cells are easily
  distinguishable; and pseudoparenchyma which consists of
  closely packed, generally isodimetric or oval cells that resemble the
  parenchyma cells of higher plants.  In
  this type of tissue the hyphae have lost their individuality and are not
  distinguishable as such (Plate 55).             Conidia are small, detachable
  bodies, either with one or more cells and capable of germinating.   Catenulate conidia are
  borne in chains.  They may become
  catenulate by continuous pinching-off of the end of the conidiophore, or the first
  conidium may divide giving rise to the second, and so on:               Sporangiospores
  are common in the Phycomycota:               Zoospores (Planospores)
  are characteristic of aquatic fungi:               Ascospores are
  characteristic of the Ascomycota, although these also exhibit other spore
  types.                 Basidiospores are
  characateristic of the Basidiomycota, although these also exhibit other spore
  types:               All the noted spores are “walled structures” except the
  zoospores                 Provost in 1807 first observed a
  spore germinate from one fungus species. 
  In the process of germination a spore must have a suitable environment
  (water taken up).  The wall becomes thin
  in one or more places after water has been taken in.               In double-walled spores, the outer
  wall cracks on germination.               Viability may be either long or
  short.  Some spores are not durable at
  high altitudes (high ultra-violet rays cause lethal mutagens).  Sometimes simply the presence of an
  element, e.g., Boron, will stimulate germination.  In multicellular spores each cell can give rise to a mycelium.     -------------------------------------------               In 1952 Alexopoulos gave a
  detailed narrative of Sexual Reproduction in the fungi, which holds true into
  the 21st Century, and the following description is derived therefrom [Alexopoulos,
  C. J.  1952.  Introductory Mycology. 
  John Wiley & Sons, NY.  482
  p.]. 
 
 
             The most common
  methods where compatible nuclei are brought together (Plasmogamy)
  are: 
      2. Gametangial contact.  In a large number of fungi, the gametes of
  the male or of both the male and the female gametangia have been reduced to
  undifferentiated protoplasts consisting chiefly of a nucleus. Such gametes
  are never released from the gametangia to the outside, but are transferred
  directly from one gametangium into the other. In this method, two gametangia
  of opposite sex come in contact, and one or more gamete nuclei migrate from
  the male to the female. In no case do the gametangia actually fuse or in any
  way lose their identity during the sexual act. The male nuclei, in some
  species, enter the female gametangium through a pore developed by the
  dissolution of the gametangial walls at the point of contact; in other
  species, an especially developed fertilization tube serves as a passage for
  the male nuclei (Plate 60). After the
  passage of the nuclei has been accomplished the oogonium continues its
  development in various ways, and the antheridium eventually disintegrates. 
             a.  Passage of the
  contents of one gametangium into the other through a pore developed in the
  gametangial walls at the point of contact. 
  This method is typical of some holocarpic forms in which the entire
  thallus acts as a gametangium, the male thallus attaching itself to and
  emptying its entire content into the female thallus (Plate 78f).
               b.  Direct fusion of the
  two gametangial cells into one. This takes place by the dissolution of the contacting
  walls of the two gametangia, resulting in a common cell in which the two
  protoplasts mix (Plate 61, 111g, 112g).      4. Spermatization.   Some
  fungi bear numerous, minute, uninucleate, spore-like, male structures termed
  spermatia that h are produced in various ways.  The spermatia are carried by insects, wind, water, or (in some
  other way, to the female gametangia or to special receptive hyphae, or even
  to somatic hyphae, to which they become attached. A pore develops at the
  point of contact, and the contents of the spermatium pass into the particular
  receptive structure that serves as the female organ (Plate 62) 
   Sexual
  Compatibility             Sexual compatibility. Although this phenomenon
  is certainly related to sex because it affects sexual reproduction,
  compatibility should not be confused with sex.  There are, for example, many fungi that produce clearly
  distinguishable male and female sex organs on the same thallus but in which,
  nevertheless, single individuals are sexually self-sterile because their male organs are incompatible with their female organs and no
  plasmogamy can take place. On the
  basis of sex, most fungi may be classified into three categories:                  1.  Hermaphroditic, in which each thallus bears both male
  and female organs. 
                    morphologically
  indistinguishable as male or female. Fungi in
  the above sex categories belong to one or the other of the following  two
  groups on the basis of compatibility:                  1. Those in which every thallus is
  sexually self-fertile, and can therefore reproduce sexually by itself without
  the aid of another thallus. 
 
 
   Life
  Cycle in Fungi 
   -------------------------------------------   Please view the following for additional examples of Fungal
  Structures & Reproduction:    Plate 1 = Fungal Vegetative Body-1 Plate 2 = Fungal Vegetative Body-2 Plate 3 = Examples of Fungus Spores Plate
  51 = Successive growth stages of hypha:  Gelasinospora autosteira. Plate
  52 = Somatic hyphae. Plate
  53 = Three types of haustoria. Plate
  54 = Two stages in spore germination. Plate
  55 = Fungal tissues: Parenchyma & Pseudoparenchyma. Plate
  56 = Stroma & sclerotium:  Daldinia sp. & Claviceps
  purpurea Plate
  57 = Asexual reproduction: Fragmenting
  hypha:  Collybia conigena &
  Fusarium sp. Plate
  58 = Asexual reproduction:  Budding Plate 58b = Various types of fungal spores. Plate
  59 = Sexual reproduction:  Planogametic copulation: Catenaria sp.,
  Allomyces arbuscula &                        Monoblepharella
  taylori. Plate
  60 = Sexual reproduction:  Plasmogamy thru' gametangial contact in Pythium
  aphanidermatum. Plate
  61 = Sexual reproduction:  Plasmogamy thru' gametangial copulation in
  Sporodinia garndis. Plate
  62 = Sexual reproduction:  Plasmogamy by spermatization in Pleurage
  anserina. Plate
  63 = Sexual reproduction:  Plasmogamy thru' somatogamy in Peniophora
  sambuci. | |||
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