FUNGI

fŭnˈjī, kingdom of heterotrophic single-celled, multinucleated, or multicellular organisms, including yeasts, molds, and mushrooms. The organisms live as parasites, symbionts, or saprobes (see saprophyte). Previously classified in the plant kingdom, fungi are nonmotile, like plants, but lack the vascular tissues (phloem and xylem) that form the true roots, stems, and leaves of plants. Most coenocytic (multinucleated) or multicelluar fungi are composed of multiple filaments, called hyphae, grouped together into a discrete organism called a mycelium. The cell walls of fungi are of chitin or other noncellulose compounds. In many ways fungi are more closely related to animals than to plants, and they have been thought to share a common protist ancestor with animals. A recent classification system suggested by nucleic acid (genetic material) comparisons places the fungi with the animals and the plants in an overarching taxonomic group called the eukarya.

Most fungi are capable of asexual and sexual reproduction. Asexual reproduction is by fragmentation or spore formation. Those that reproduce sexually produce gametes in specialized areas of the hyphae called gametangia. The gametes may be released to fuse into spores elsewhere, or the gametangia themselves may fuse. In some cases dikaryons [di=two, karyo=nucleus], which are found only among fungi, result when unspecialized hyphae fuse but their nuclei remain distinct for part of the life cycle.

Unlike algae or plants, fungi lack the chlorophyll necessary for photosynthesis and must therefore live as parasites or saprobes (see parasite). Typically they release digestive enzymes onto a food source, partially dissolving it to make the necessary organic or inorganic nutrients available. Some parasitic types obtain their food directly from the cells of a living food source. Some types of fungi are involved in symbiotic relationships, for example, lichens (a combination of a fungus and a green alga or a cyanobacterium) and the mycorrhizae (symbiosis between a fungus and the roots of a vascular plant).

Some fungi are pathogenic to humans and other animals. Such diseases are called mycoses or fungal infections. Some molds, in particular, release toxic chemicals called mycotoxins that can result in poisoning or death. Various fungi can also cause serious damage to fruit harvests and other crops (see diseases of plants).

Types of Fungi

The 100,000 identified species of organisms commonly classed together as fungi are customarily divided into four phyla, or divisions: Zygomycota, Ascomycota, Basidiomycota, and Deuteromycota.

Zygomycota includes black bread mold and molds, such as those of the genus Glomus, that form important symbiotic relationships with plants. Most are soil-living saprobes that feed on dead animal or plant remains. Some are parasitic of plants or insects. They reproduce sexually and form tough zygospores from the fusion of neighboring gametangia. There is no distinguishable male or female.

Ascomycota includes yeasts, the powdery mildews, the black and blue-green molds, edible types such as the morel and the truffle, and species that cause such diseases of plants as Dutch elm disease, chestnut blight, apple scab, and ergot. There are over 50,000 species, about 25,000 of which occur only in lichens. In ascomycetes, the hyphae are subdivided by porous walls through which the cytoplasm and the nuclei can pass. Their life cycle is a complex combination of sexual and asexual reproduction.

Basidiomycota includes the gill fungi (most mushrooms), the pore fungi (e.g., the bracket fungi, which grow shelflike on trees, and an edible type called tuckahoe), and the puffballs. It also includes the fungi that cause smut and rust in plants. Like ascomycetes, the hyphae are subdivided by porous walls. In basidiomycetes, two hyphae fuse to form a dikaryotic mycelium (a mycelium in which both nuclei remain distinct). These mycelia differentiate into reproductive structures called basidia that make up the basidiocarp (the body popularly known as the mushroom cap). The nuclei then fuse and undergo meiosis, creating spores with one nucleus each. When these spores germinate, they produce hyphae, and the process begins again.

Deuteromycota comprises a miscellaneous assortment of fungi that do not not fit neatly in other divisions; they have in common an apparent lack of sexual reproductive features. Also called Fungi Imperfecti, the group includes species that help create Roquefort and Camembert cheeses, that cause diseases of plants and of animals (e.g., athlete's foot and ringworm), and that produce penicillin. A number of the fungi classified as deuteromycetes have been found to be asexual stages of species in other groups, and some classification schemes consider the deuteromycetes a class under Ascomycota.

Usefulness of Fungi

Fungi are valuable economically as a source of antibiotics, of vitamins, and of various industrially important chemicals, such as alcohols, acetone, and enzymes, as well as for their role in fermentation processes, as in the production of alcoholic beverages, vinegar, cheese, and bread dough. They are extremely important in soil renewal, through the decomposition of organic matter (see humus)—a function unwelcome when it results in the rotting of clothing and other goods and the spoilage of foods.

Bibliography

See C. M. Christensen, The Molds and Man (3d. rev. ed. 1965); J. Webster, Introduction to Fungi (1980); B. Kendrick, The Fifth Kingdom (1985); A. Chandra, Elsevier's Dictionary of Edible Mushrooms (1989); C. T. Ingold and H. J. Hudson, The Biology of Fungi (6th ed. 1993); G. W. Hudler, Magical Mushrooms, Mischievous Molds (1998).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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fungus. 2 The U. S. House of Representatives...mold as any furry growth of minute fungi occurring in moist conditions...information in hand, Ill explain what a fungus is by telling you what a fungus does. Fungi are microorganisms that feed by...
...basidiomycetes, and a second group of fungi called ascomycetes (featured in the following...chapter), form septa. Hyphae of other fungi are not partitioned by these cross-walls...Pythium insidiosum, and the zygomycete fungi have this non-compartmentalized organization...
...symbiotic relation- ship with fungi, called fungus roots, or mycorrhizae. Because the fungi are able to absorb minerals...roots, the plant allows the fungi to grow-and uses the minerals accumulated by the fungus. In exchange, the fungus...
...of zygomycetes. The fungi use adhesive hyphae to...symbionts. Each species of fungus produces a characteristic...behavior of these soil fungi and captured the imagination...of using carnivorous fungi to control nematode pests of plants. A soil fungus, Paecilomyces lilacinus...
FUNGI KINGDOM Fungi, multicellular...grown commlTially, Howmmr, fungi can also dlstroy crops hv attack...elm cliacaac, caused hy tl1l fungus Cermor iati., ulmi, which...clothcs and furnishings, All fungi, except singk-llkd yeasts...
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Fungus Comsumption by the Southern...Pagels INTRODUCTION Fungi are components of the...hypogeous mycorrhizal fungi, except for the epigeous saprophytic fungus Coprinus, suggesting...voles consume different fungi in forests of differing...
...dieir carbon from fungi during this initial...contact with this fungus host via seed dissemination...with mycorrhizal fungi in situ. Doing so...establishment of additional fungus "hotspots" for...tentaculata and diat local fungus diversity exists...advocate diat die fungi used in amending...
...Identification of Fungi Most of the fungi that were isolated are considered...cosmopolitan. For example, postharvest fungi often contaminate bread, produce...caused by infections with the fungus Alternaria (Table 3). Fungi such as Fusarium, Aspergillus...
...of orchid mycorrhizal fungi and few North American...and speculated that the fungus could be specific to...symbiont. The use of fungi to propagate terrestrial...germinated using the second fungus (Pleu-257) (Table...incubated in the absence of fungi (control) germinated...
...affected by the length of time the fungus was growing on the apples...that were being consumed by fungi at an increasing rate. In other...of calories or nutrients to fungi or other microbes (Gendron...possible benefit may be that some fungi facilitate the digestion of...
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The Fungus among Us: Tiny but Ubiquitous, Mycorrhizal Fungi Form Vital Connections Underground...interconnected roots linked by fungi, passing nutrients between individuals...realizing it, is mycorrhizal fungi. Fungi take many-forms, ranging...
...to control. But a fungus in the forest soil...environment for other fungi useful as biological...been infected by a fungus, Verticillium lecanii...with other types of fungi. If the V. lecanii...to the number of fungi already in the forest...about developing a fungus that occurs naturally...
Fungi of the Forest by Yvonne Baskin Turn over...threads, an interwoven mat of fungal hyphae. Fungi dominate the soils of conifer forests. Elaine...lower-elevation fir forest, the skein of fungi from a teaspoon of soil would stretch forty...
Capturing Fungi. by Anthony Winston I have long been fascinated by fungi and over the years have photographed many particularly...was then I decided that I should learn something about fungi and so I bought two books, the Peterson and the Audubon...
Focus on Fungi: With the Summers Heat Now a Distant Memory...mushrooms, toadstools and other types of fungi. The cooler, damper weather and the abundance...perfect conditions for the emergence of fungi on the forest floor and in the bark of trees...
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Im a Fungi to Be With! Fungi hunter extraordinaire Gordon...Commission is staging a series of fungi forages to shed light on the...near to registering 10,000 fungi sightings with Londons Kew Gardens...year hunt for a marsh violet fungus met with success near Kielder...
WALES: Fungus Foray Seeks More...uncover rare species of fungi - such as toadstools...first identified rare fungi and has more experience...North west Wales fungus sites than anyone...container for carrying fungi. Under 16s must...hotmail.com A fungus foray around Llangefnis...
Fungi to Be with; Charles Campion...while writing a book on urban fungi. He has been studying Hampstead...particularly good year for bracket fungi - large, wedge-shaped growths...examples growing on it. If any fungus could be called beautiful...
WALES: Rare Fungus a Boost for Fields Defenders...toadstools were discovered during a Fungus Foray held as part of a local...said: "At the end of the Fungus Foray, the species discovered...recently published volume Fungi of North West Wales is an...
Good Grounds for Delight at Gourmet Fungi; Civic Centre Grass Yields Bumper Crop of Coveted Chanterelles...is growing wild in the grounds of a North Wales civic centre. Fungi fans can be spotted scouring the grassy areas surrounding Molds...
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...living food source. Some types of fungi are involved in symbiotic relationships...example, lichens (a combination of a fungus and a green alga or a cyanobacterium...roots of a vascular plant). Some fungi are pathogenic to humans and other...
BRACKET FUNGI see Fungi . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...PLANTS Most plant diseases are caused by fungi, bacteria, and viruses. Although the...plants; both are caused by bacteria and fungi. Any environmental factor that favors...reproductive structures (the spores of fungi). Wind, rain, insects, humans, and...
...multinucleated organisms that superficially resemble fungi but are now recognized as having an independent...or as parasites , attacking plants, fungi, and algae. They typically take the form...species of chytrids. The oomycetes resemble fungi, taking the form of coenocytic filaments...
...most comprised of a sac fungus (Ascomycete) and a green...include multiple species of fungi. Lichens commonly grow...filaments, or hyphae, of the fungus. Its typical greenish gray...organism with the colorless fungi, although sometimes the...
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