Kingdom Fungi
Fungi are a unique kingdom of heterotrophic organisms with incredible diversity! You’ve seen them on moldy bread 🍞, rotten fruit 🍓, mushrooms 🍄, and even as white spots on mustard leaves. They’re everywhere—air, soil, water, plants, and animals—and love warm, humid places.
Key Features:
- Structure: Mostly filamentous (except unicellular yeast). Their body is made of thread-like hyphae. A network of hyphae forms the mycelium.
- Cell Walls: Made of chitin and polysaccharides.
- Nutrition:
- 🍂 Saprophytes: Absorb food from dead matter.
- 🦠 Parasites: Live on living hosts (e.g., wheat rust fungus).
- 🤝 Symbionts: Partner with algae (as lichens) or plant roots (as mycorrhiza).
Reproduction:
- Vegetative: Fragmentation, fission, budding.
- Asexual: Via spores like conidia, sporangiospores, or zoospores.
- Sexual: Involves 3 steps:
- Plasmogamy: Fusion of two gametes’ cytoplasm.
- Karyogamy: Fusion of their nuclei.
- Meiosis: Zygote divides to form haploid spores (oospores, ascospores, basidiospores).
Classification of Fungi:
1. Phycomycetes 🌊
- Found in water, moist wood, or as plant parasites.
- Mycelium: Aseptate and coenocytic (multinucleated).
- Asexual spores: Zoospores (motile) or aplanospores (non-motile).
- Sexual spores: Zygospores (from fused gametes).
- Examples: Mucor, Rhizopus (bread mold), Albugo (mustard parasite).
2. Ascomycetes (Sac Fungi) 🧴
- Mostly multicellular (e.g., Penicillium), some unicellular (e.g., yeast).
- Mycelium: Branched and septate.
- Asexual spores: Conidia (on conidiophores).
- Sexual spores: Ascospores (in sac-like asci within ascocarps).
- Examples: Aspergillus, Claviceps, Neurospora. Edible ones: morels, truffles 🍄.
3. Basidiomycetes (Club Fungi) 🍄
- Include mushrooms, puffballs, and plant parasites (e.g., rusts).
- Mycelium: Branched and septate.
- No asexual spores; reproduces via fragmentation.
- Sexual spores: Basidiospores (on club-shaped basidia in basidiocarps).
- Examples: Agaricus (mushroom), Ustilago (smut), Puccinia (rust fungus).
4. Deuteromycetes (Imperfect Fungi) ❓
- Only asexual stage known; sexual stage undiscovered or classified elsewhere.
- Reproduce via conidia.
- Mycelium: Septate and branched.
- Examples: Alternaria, Colletotrichum, Trichoderma.
Kingdom Plantae 🌿
- Eukaryotic, chlorophyll-containing organisms (mostly autotrophic).
- Some heterotrophs: insectivorous plants (e.g., Venus flytrap) or parasites (e.g., Cuscuta).
- Cell walls made of cellulose.
- Exhibit alternation of generations (diploid sporophyte + haploid gametophyte).
Kingdom Animalia 🐾
- Heterotrophic, multicellular eukaryotes without cell walls.
- Digest food internally; store energy as glycogen or fat.
- Nutrition: Holozoic (ingest food).
- Most can move; complex sensory systems.
- Reproduction: Sexual via copulation + embryonic development.
Viruses, Viroids, Prions & Lichens 🦠
- Viruses: Non-cellular, inert crystalline structures. Cause diseases (e.g., common cold). Not considered “alive” due to lack of cellular structure.
- Lichens: Symbiotic associations (fungi + algae).
Important Concepts for NEET 🎯
- Fungal Reproduction Steps: Plasmogamy → Karyogamy → Meiosis. Dikaryotic stage in ascomycetes/basidiomycetes.
- Fungal Classes & Examples:
- Phycomycetes: Mucor, Rhizopus
- Ascomycetes: Penicillium (antibiotics), yeast
- Basidiomycetes: Mushrooms, rust/smut fungi
- Symbiotic Associations: Lichens (fungi + algae) and mycorrhiza (fungi + plant roots).
- Viruses: Non-cellular, cause diseases (e.g., flu), inert outside host cells.
- Kingdom Key Features:
- Plantae: Cellulose walls, autotrophic.
- Animalia: No cell walls, holozoic nutrition.
Keep revising — you’re doing great! 💪