Fungi
What are Fungi?
• Fungi grow from the ground once led scientists
to classify them as nonphotosynthetic plants
• they are not plants at all, fungi are very different
• Fungi are eukaryotic heterotrophs that have cell
walls
Chitin
• A complex carbohydrate that
makes up the cell walls of fungi
Fungi Nutrition
• Unlike animals, fungi do not ingest their food
• Instead they digest food outside their bodies and then
absorb it
• Many feed by absorbing nutrients from decaying matter
in the soil (decomposers)
• Others live as parasites, absorbing nutrients from their
hosts
Structure and Function of Fungi
• All fungi are multicellular with the exception of yeast
• Multicellular fungi are composed of thin filaments called
hyphae
Structure and Function of Fungi
Fungus Structure
• The bodies of multicellular fungi are composed
of many hyphae tangled together into a thick
mass called a mycelium
Fungus Structure
Fruiting body
• The reproductive structure growing from the mycelium in
the soil that you recognize as a mushroom
Fungi reproduction
• Most fungi reproduce both
• Asexually by spore
• Sexually by zygote
spore
Types of fungi
zygomycetes
Sac Fungi
Yeast
Club Fungi
Imperfect fungi
Cordyceps

Fungi