Phylum Ascomycota (sac fungi)
Yeasts are:
common unicellular ascomycetes and include about 40 genera
Ascomycetes reproduce asexually by forming spores called....
conidia
Yeasts do not form:
conidia
Conidia form on the surface of.....
conidiophores (in contrast to spores that forms within sporangia in Rhizopus)
Ascomycota (sac fungi) includes:
yeasts, come molds, morels, and truffles
Sexual reproduction in Ascomycota (sac fungi):
1. begins with contact of monokaryotic hyphae from two mating strains 2. where hyphae touch, large multinucleate swellings appear (antheridia and ascogonia) fuse. Haploid cells intermingle in the swelling 3. a dikaryotic mycelium grows from this swelling; nuclei do not fuse immediately 4. tightly bundled dikaryotic hyphae grow and mingle with monokaryotic hyphae from each parent to form a cup-shaped ascocarp 5. dikaryotic cells lining the inside of the ascocarp form sac-shaped asci 6. nuclei fuse in each ascus to form a zygote 7. After fusion, meiosis produces 4 haploid ascopores 8. mitosis produces 8 ascospores within each mature ascus 9. the asci on the surface of the ascocarp rupture and release ascopores into the environment 10. Each ascospore can produce a new mycelium
Common examples of fungi that form conidia:
Aspergillus and Penicillium
What is Ascomycota (sac fungi) name derived from?
a microscopic, sac-shaped reproductive structure called an ascus
How do some fungal species defy classification in the major fungal phyla?
a number of fungal species produce only asexual conidia and have no known sexual phase
Most of a yeast's reproduction is:
asexual by cell fission or budding
What do conidiophores, modified, hyphae, do?
partition nuclei in longitudinal chains of beadlike conidia (each conidium contains one or more nuclei)