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how do fungi derive nutrition |
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Definition
heterotrophs that feed by absorption |
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network of tiny filaments (body of fungi) |
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what fungal cell walls are made of |
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interwoven mass of fungal hyphae |
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ability to move, run, swim, fly in search of food or mates |
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True/False. The fungus concentrates its energy and resources on increasing hyphal girth, rather than hyphal length. |
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crosswalls that divide cells in the hyphae |
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organisms that have a continuous cytoplasmic mass having hundreds of thousands of nuclei. no cell wall separating each nucleus |
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specialized hyphae which the fungi use to extract nutrients from their hosts |
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"out-"; type of mycorrhizal fungi; forms sheaths of hyphae over the surface of a root and also grow into the extracellular spaces of the cortex |
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"fungus roots" mutually beneficial relationships between fungi and plant roots |
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arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi |
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"tree-"; type of mycorrhizal fungi; extend their branching hyphae through the root cell wall and into tubes formed by pushing inward of the root cell membrane |
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hyphae from two mycelia release sexual signaling molecules |
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union of two parent mycelia |
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parts of mycelium contain coexisting, genetically different nuclei during plasmogamy when the fungi don't fuse right away |
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the different nuclei may even exchange chromosomes and genes in a process similar to crossing over |
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the haploid nuclei contributed by the two parents fuse, producing diploid cells |
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fungi that reproduce asexually by growing as filamentous fungi that produce haploid spored by mitosis |
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"second-, -fungus"; no sexual stage |
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name that refers to the posterior location of the flagellum in these organisms |
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flagellated zoospores; early in fungi evolution |
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molds, parasites, commensal symbionts of animals |
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produced by plasmogamy; zygote that's multi-nucleate structure |
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formerly zygomycetes, but they form arbuscular mycorrhizae |
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type of fungi that productes sexual spores in saclike asci; commonly known as sac fungi |
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fruiting bodies in sexual stages of most ascomycetes |
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asexual spores produced by ascomycetes |
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"little pedestal" important decomposers of woods and other plants |
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fruiting bodies made sexually by mycelium in response to environmental stimuli |
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fungi that live insides leaves or other plant parts without causing harm |
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symbiotic association between a photosynthetic microorganism and a fungus in which millions of photosynthetic cells are help in a mass of fungal hyphae |
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small clusters of hyphae with embedded algae |
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general term for fungal infection |
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