Fungi: Molds
Characteristics of molds
-multicellular -filaments: made up of hyphae -> mycelium: visible growth; intertwining branching mat -Vegetative mycelium, aerial mycelium -Aseptate or septate - pseudo/true/dolipore -Asexual reproduction - spores - sporangiospores/conidia -Seuxal reproduction - spores - zygospores/ascospores/basidiospores
Deuteromycotina
Aspergillus sp., Penicillium sp.
Zygomycotina
Rhizopus sp., Phycomyces sp.
What kind of selective medium does mold prefer to grow on?
Sabouraud agar or potato dextrose agar -Favor mold growth because of low acidity (pH 4.5 - 5.6) discourages bacterial growth (which favors neutral pH) -Molds grow best at room temperature (25C) -Molds grow at much slower rate than bacteria
How is mold identified?
Spore type and shape, type of sporangia, and type of mycelium
Slide culture technique
Used to avoid disruption of structures to identify molds
Vegetative mycelium
mat that grows on or in the surface of nutrient medium so that it can extract nutrients
Aerial mycelium
rises up from mat; specialized hyphae produced and give rise to spores that are reproductive elements of mold