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| True Fungi (Eumycophyta) 1Zygomycota
  (Phycomycetes) -- Zygote fungi(Contact)         Please CLICK on underlined
  links & included illustrations for details           Use Ctrl/F to search
  for Subject Matter:     Sample Examinations            The Zygomycota includes a group of
  organisms that show a tremendous variation in structure.  There is some question as to whether these
  are advanced organisms that have degenerated, or whether they are truly
  primitive.  Subclasses are
  Monoflagellatae, Biflagellatae and Aflagellatae.  It is suspected that these three groups might have evolved
  independently.   Monoflagellatae             The order Chytridiales has been considered at
  the evolutionary bottom of the Monoflagellatae and are thus among the lowest
  of the True Fungi.  There are over 40
  genera and several hundred described species, all distributed among over ten
  different families.  The majority of
  species are aquatic, but some species are common in some soils and may also
  be found in other terrestrial habitats. 
  A considerable number are known to live as saprophytes on submerged
  organic debris; others parasitize algae, especially freshwater algae or
  aquatic filamentous fungi.  Some
  species grow on microscopic animals, or on pollen grains that have fallen
  into the water.  Finally some attack
  terrestrial angiosperms, and among these there are incitants of some
  important diseases of food plants.            Among the
  simplest members of the Chytridiales the body is a single globular cell, and
  the entire structures is eventually used up in the formation of reproductive
  bodies.  Such organisms are often
  called holocarpic.  Among the more advanced species the
  thallus is polycentric, a number of nucleated centers being connected by a
  system of generally enucleate rhizomycelial threads.  The nucleated areas are transformed into
  or serve as points of origin for reproductive organs.             The Genus Olpidium parasitizes algae,
  fungi, pollen, small aquatic animals and some higher plants.  The life cycle has been worked out on
  cabbage, where the organism is unicellular, uninucleate and
  intracellular.               An exit
  papilla dissolves a hole in the sporangium wall and later through the host
  cell wall. The sporangium develops uniflagellated zoospores of the “whip
  lash” type.  The organism is
  Holocarpic where the entire vegetative thallus is used up in reproduction (Eucarpic =
  only a portion of the thallus is used in reproduction).               The zoospore
  (or planospore, swarm spore) lands on another cabbage root epidermal cell and
  loses its flagellum and builds a wall around itself.  The wall remains on the epidermis and the protoplast
  is discharged into the cell.  It may
  go in for a few layers of cells before building up another wall around
  itself.  Germination follows.               In some cases
  the zoospores may act as facultative gametes.  Two gametes may fuse to form a zygote (diploid).  Rather than the protoplast penetrating the
  host in this case only, the entire zygote will enter, no portion being left
  outside.  A wall is secreted around
  the zygote and the overwintering stage is formed.  In the spring meiotic division occurs and produces a
  multinucleate structure (haploid nuclei). 
  The zygote then turns loose many uniflagellated zoospores.  When gametes are produced, the
  “sporangium” may best be referred to as a gametangium).  [See PLATE 15 for Life Cycle of Olpidium viciae].             The Genus
  Synchytrium has species that parasitize higher plants.   In the reproductive phase there is a
  cluster of sporangia involved.  The
  parasite induces hypertrophy of the epidermal cells of the “hog peanut” host.               The life cycle of Synchytrium
  decipiens, is shown as follows in PLATE 16  & PLATE 19:                 The life cycle of Synchytrium endobioticum is shown in PLATE 17 and  PLATE
  18:                 Another species, Synchytrium
  cellulare, parasitizes false wood nettle leaves.  It is similar to S. endobioticum in
  having a sexual and asexual stage, but there are 9-16 sporangia in a sorus (S.
  endobioticum has 7-9).                       When septa occur in the
  Zygomycota, which may happen in an older mycelium, they are complete and
  without a septal pore.  The
  flagellation of motile cells is the basis of the Subclass classification:               The vegetative thallus of
  Chytridiales is single-celled (holocarpic). 
  There is a cell wall, typical of a true fungus, and single-flagellated
  motile cells.  Synchytrium is one step
  ahead of Olpidium in that it possesses a character where each thallus
  goes into several sporangia.             Podochytrium cornutum parasitizes diatoms of the
  Genus Stephanodiscus.  There is
  a single uniflagellated zoospore that comes to rest on Stephanodiscus.  It then sends out rhizoids, which
  penetrate diatoms, presumably through the pores in the walls.  Rhizoids may be called haustoria, but they
  are not “hyphae” because there is no nucleus present.  More than one parasite (zoospore) may
  infect one diatom cell at any given time. 
  P. cornutum is a monocentric and eucarpic organism.               The Asexual Stage in the Genus Rhizophidium
  has zoospores with a single posterior flagellum that land on a host cell (an
  alga).               The spore sends out rhizoids and
  the protoplasm divides into more nuclei and then cleaves into uninucleate
  divisions.  These then become
  zoospores.  They are eucarpic.               The Sexual stage of Rhizophidium
  has two zoospores, which land side by side on an alga.  One will enlarge and the wall between the
  two cells will rupture.  The
  protoplasm of the small one erupts into the larger one.  A resting sporangium with a hard
  surrounding wall is formed and the zoospores are released thereafter.           The Genus Entophlyctis has motile
  zoospores that land on algal filaments and send germ tubes through the host
  cell wall.               Nuclear division precedes
  cleavage.  The swollen section is
  abscised from the germ tube, and an exit papilla is sent up to the surface
  where zoospores are released.  There is no sexual stage and the organism is Eucarpic and Monocentric).               Urophlyctis alfalfae causes “Crown
  Wart” disease.  It differs from Physoderma zeae-maydis by
  inducing hypertrophy.  A single
  zoospore alights on a host epidermal cell and sends out a germ tube, causing
  the hypertrophy.  The tube may extend
  to more than one cell (= Polyphagous).               The nucleus of the zoospore
  migrates to a turbinate
  cell where it will divide into 5-8 nuclei, which cleave into as
  many cells.  Each of the cells of a turbinate
  cell may send out a network of germ tubes with their respective turbinate
  cells.  The organism is polycentric.             The turbinate cells mature and a
  system of sparsely branched rhizoids develop at the end of each turbinate
  cell.  Eventually one of the cells at
  the end of a turbinate, instead of giving rise to a rhizo-mycelial system,
  balloons out to form a structure larger than the turbinate cell itself.               The nucleus divides; a thick wall
  is laid down and forms a resting sporangium. 
  A halo of rhizoids is also present. 
  Often the host tissue may wall-off a cluster of resting sporangia with
  corky tissue.  Eventually the host
  disintegrates, releasing the resting sporangia.  These will split up into many multinucleate sporangia.  Each then cleaves into uninucleate
  portions that give rise to a zoospore. 
  The zoospore may land on a host’s epidermal cell where it sends out
  some rhizoids.  This structure then
  forms a sporangium (ephemeral sporangium), which in turn releases zoospores that
  begin the vegetative mycelium over again. 
  There is no evidence of a sexual stage.               Physoderma zeae-maydis causes “Brown
  Spot” disease of
  maize.  The sporangium is
  slipper-shaped.  As soon as the
  sporangium becomes empty an internal proliferation occurs and a new sporangium
  develops from a remaining nucleus of the old sporangium.  The new sporangium releases
  zoospores.  This process may be
  repeated several times.  The
  slipper-shaped structure may be considered a gametangium.             As the germ tube goes through a
  maize leaf, there is no hypertrophy. 
  The resting sporangium migrates into the upper sorus portion and
  cleavage occurs forming the sporangium. 
  Each entity gives rise to one zoospore.     -------------------------------------------          Please see
  following plates for Life Cycles and Structural characteristics in the Chytridiales:    Zygomycota:  Monoflagellatae: 
  Chytridiales        Plate
  15 = Life Cycle -- Olpidium viciae      Plate
  16 = Life Cycle -- Synchytrium decipiens #1      Plate
  19 = Life Cycle -- Synchytrium decipiens #2      Plate
  17 = Life Cycle -- Synchytrium endobioticum      Plate
  18 = Life Cycle -- Synchytrium endobioticum #2      Plate
  20 = Life Cycle    Podochytrium
  cornutum      Plate
  21 = Life Cycle -- Chytridiales:  Endophlyctis      Plate
  22 = Life Cycle -- Chytridiales:  Rhizophidium
  couchii      Plate 78 = Life Cycle2 -- Rhizophidium couchii.      Plate
  23 = Life Cycle -- Chytridiales:  Urophlyctis
  alfalfae      Plate
  24 = Example Structures -- Chytridiales: 
  Sexual Reproduction      Plate
  25 = Example Structures -- Chytridiales: 
  Synchytrium spp.      Plate
  26 = Example Structures -- Chytridiales: 
  Physoderma, Podochytrium, Urophlyctis.      Plate 74 = Thallus of Chytriomyces
  aureus.      Plate 75 = Flagella of Zygomycota:  Whip lash, Tinsel and combination.      Plate 76 = Life Cycle -- Olpidium viciae.      Plate 77 = Life Cycle -- Synchytrium endobioticum.    =================================             The order Blastocladiales
  has an arbusculate mycelium.  Species are usually aquatic, but some may
  occur in moist soil.  The zygotes do
  not have a hard wall.             Allomyces arbusculus is a typical representative of
  this order.  It lives in fresh water
  or moist soil and the thallus is visible with the naked eye.  The base of the mycelium is attached to a
  plant thallus by rhizoids.  It has a
  coenocytic mycelium.             During the life cycle the trunk
  will branch and the tips of branches differentiate into hairs of sex
  organs.  The bottom differentiation is
  reddish and small (male) while the top one is clear and larger (female).               The thallus is multinucleate and
  has N chromosomes (gametophyte generation on N thallus).  Smaller differentiation cleaves into many
  protoplasts that form gametes with a single posterior flagellum (male).  The larger one cleaves into a smaller
  number of larger gametes, which are more sluggish in their movement
  (female).  Two gametes eventually
  fuse, giving a zygote.  The zygote is
  biflagellated for a short period of time. 
  A system of rhizoids is sent out from the basal end while aerial
  hyphae are sent out from the anterior end. 
  This thallus is 2N.               The tips of the 2N thallus can
  differentiate into either of two structures. 
  The first is a thin-walled sporangium that may occur singly or in a
  chain.  It gives rise to a 2N
  zoospore, which in turn gives rise to another 2N thallus.               The second structure is a thick-walled
  sporangium that possesses characteristic pits.  It can survive for years in the dry state.  In a moist environment the multinucleate
  protoplast will divide and release uniflagellated motile cells.  Meiosis is believed to take place in the
  thick-walled sporangium.  Spores are
  1N and either fuse to form a 2N thallus or they may simply give rise to a 1N
  thallus without fusing.  The gametes
  involved are called anisogametes that only differ in size.  An Alternation of Generations is
  shown by the genus Allomyces.             In the Genus Blastocladia there is an extensive system of
  rhizoids.  They are an aquatic genus
  with an arbusculate mycelium that usually branches dichotomously.  During the life cycle the tips of the
  mycelium branches giving rise to clavate or elongated, thin-walled sporangia
  (think-walled = 2N).  Or they may
  develop spheroid, thick-walled sporangia, which are also 2N.  There is no sexual stage or resting spore
  and no Alternation of Generations.     =====================================               The order Monoblepharidales has a species that
  parasitizes nematodes and another the larvae of mosquitoes.  Their zygotes develop a hard wall.  Monoblepharis is a
  representative species that will develop a coenocytic mycelium with a few
  rhizoids at the base and the indication of an arbusculate form.  The protoplasm in the stalk becomes highly
  evacuolated, which is a good diagnostic character.               One or more sporangia develop at
  the tip, and these release zoospores. 
  There is an internal proliferation where a new sporangium arises from
  an old sporangial wall, an event that may reoccur 3-4 times.  At the ends of other branches male and
  female gametangia will differentiate.               The female gamete is uninucleate
  and referred to as an oösphere.  At maturity
  a papilla will jet out to one side of the oösphere, which allows an entry
  point to male gametes.  The male
  gametangium is multinucleate and cleaves out into many single
  posterior-flagellated gametes (antherozoid). 
  These swim toward the papilla of the female gametangium.               Oögamy is exhibited in this
  genus.  Karyogamy has not yet
  occurred, and the binucleate “zygote-to-be” crawls out to the end of the
  papilla and drops off.  The nuclei
  fuse and then the structure germinates by sending out a germ tube.  The mycelium may be either 1N or 2N,
  depending on when meiosis occurred. 
  The 1N mycelium is probably most common.  There is no Alternation of Generations.               In another genus, Monoblepharella, the
  “zygote-to-be” swims around a bit before forming the resting spore.   ----------------------------------------          Please see
  following plates for life cycles in the Blastocladiales and Monoblephariales:   Zygomycota:  Monoflagellatae: 
  Blastocladiales        Plate
  27 = Life Cycle – Blastocladiales:  
  Allomyces arbusculus      Plate
  28 = Life Cycle -- Blastocladiales: 
  Blastocladia      Plate 79 = Life Cycle -- Allomyces javanicus var. macrogynus.   Zygomycota:  Monoflagellatae: 
  Monoblepharidales        Plate
  29 = Life Cycle -- Monoblephariales: 
  Monoblepharis      Plate 80 = Life Cycle -- Monoblepharis polymorpha. ----------------------------------------     |