1.1 Introduction
Dear
students, today I am going to start a new unit of your syllabus. What I am
going to discuss today is not at all new to us. I assure you that you have read about
fungi in your senior secondary classes or you have heard the word mold,
mushroom, yeast or penicillium, etc. Yes, today I am going to discuss it.
1.2.1
General Characteristics of Fungi
a.
They are devoid of chlorophyll and so cannot prepare their food,
b. They grow in air, water, soil, and even outside and
inside of living organisms. Fungi
like to be in a moist and slightly acidic environment; they can grow with or
without light or oxygen,
c. The cell wall is composed of chitin (a fibrous substance consisting of polysaccharides, which is
also the major constituent in the exoskeleton of arthropods).
d. Fungi can be unicellular, multicellular, or dimorphic, which
is when the fungi are unicellular or multicellular depending on environmental
conditions.
e. Some fungi are harmful to other organisms (disease-causing
fungi) and some are beneficial for humans, the environment, and other organisms,
f. Some fungi are drawn their nutrition from dead and decaying
organic materials (Eg. Mucor, Agaricus, etc.) and some are drawn from other living
organisms (Eg. Puccinia graminis-trictici,
etc.).
g. Fungi in the morphological vegetative stage consist of a
tangle of slender, thread-like hyphae, whereas the reproductive stage is
usually more obvious,
h. Fungi are saprophyte heterotrophs in that they use dead or
decomposing organic matter as a source of carbon.
1.2.1
Affinities with Plants
In the
above discussion, we discuss that fungal cell has a cell wall. In all other
plant groups, the cell wall is one of the distinguishing characteristics of
plants. The reproduction processes of fungi are like other plants. A fungus
reproduces by vegetative, asexual, and sexual methods. From the lower
cryptograms to higher plants vegetative reproduction is the common method of
reproduction. Again, a fungus produces several types of asexual spores. Asexual
reproduction is the most common reproductive method of many plants. Higher-class fungi follow advanced reproductive methods which is most commonly seen in
higher plants.
From
the above discussion, we have seen that many characteristics of fungi are
similar to other plant groups.
1.2.2 Affinities
with Animals
Although fungi are placed in the plant kingdom, it has certain
dissimilarity with plants and some affinities with animals. Like the
animals, a fungus cannot prepare its food. They are dependent on other
organisms or dead and decaying organic materials. Like animals, their mode of
living is not directly dependent on sunlight. As
with animal cells, the polysaccharide of storage is glycogen rather than the
starch found in plants. Ergosterol is the steroid molecule in the cell membranes that
replaces the cholesterol found in animal cell membranes. Like animals, fungi
are heterotrophs: they use complex organic compounds as a source of carbon,
rather than fix carbon dioxide from the atmosphere as do some bacteria and most
plants. Besides, fungi do not fix nitrogen from the atmosphere. Like animals,
they must obtain it from their diet.
From the
above discussion, it is clear that certain characteristics of fungi have an affinity
with animals.
Check
Your Progress
a) Why fungi are called heterotrophic
organisms?
b) Define thallus?
c) What are hyphae?
d) The
fungal cell wall is composed of cellulose/ chitin/ lipids.
e) Reserve food materials of fungi are starch/
glycogen/ protein
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