BJU Biology Chapter 11, part 3 fungus-like protists
Blight
A disease of plants that causes rapid destruction of the leaves and stems, resulting in the death of the plant. Easily spread and can wipe out crops very quickly.
Pseudoplasmodium
A single colony of cellular slime molds that looks like a slimy slug. Although it appears and moves as a single organism, the cells retain their cell membranes and individuality.
Slime Molds
Live in cool, moist environments that are rich in organic matter like compost piles - play a large role as decomposer organisms - 2 phase life cycle includes feeding phase and reproductive phase - different appearance during different phases
fungus-like protists
No longer considered members of kingdom Fungi because their cell walls contain cellulose (NOT chitin) and they are motile - live in moist environments - heterotrophic - are important decomposers - have minimal tissue specialization
Water Molds
Often seen on dead fish or other floating dead organic material, and they appear as a branching filamentous growth of cells - Most are aquatic, although some do live in soil - responsible for many types of blight - cause of the potato famine
multinucleate
describes the plasmodium - cells walls dissolve and nuclei float around in a mass of cytoplasm
Plasmodium
formed from plasmodial slime molds during the feeding phase - organisms come together to form this giant blob that creeps along the ground and eats organic dead material - cell walls dissolve and nuclei float around in a mass of cytoplasm
Cellular Slime Molds
type of slime mold - live as amoeba-like unicellular organisms when food is plentiful - when food is scarce, the organisms gather together in a colony to form a pseudoplasmodium
Plasmodial Slime Molds
type of slime mold - looks like a cellular slime mold, but is acellular - starts like with amoeba looking cells, but during feeding phase, cells join together to form a plasmodium - which creeps along the ground like a giant blob and eats organic dead material