BIOL 227 Lecture Notes - Lecture 4: Arbuscular Mycorrhiza, Mycelium, Zygomycota

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Fungi are heterotrophs: they cannot make their own food. A fungus absorbs nutrients from the environment outside of its body by secreting hydrolytic enzymes into their surroundings. Other fungi use enzymes to penetrate the walls of cells, enabling the fungi to absorb nutrients from the cells. Fungal hyphae form an interwoven mass called a mycelium that infiltrates the material on which the fungus feeds. The hyphae are divided into cells by cross walls, or septa. Septa generally have pores large enough to allow ribosomes, mitochondria and even nuclei to flow from cell to cell. Some fungi lack septa, known as coenocytic fungi, these organisms consist of a continuous cytoplasmic mass having hundreds or thousands of nuclei. Results from the repeated division of nuclei without cytokinesis. Some fungal species have specialized hyphae called haustoria, which the fungi use to extract nutrients from, or exchange nutrients with, their plant hosts.

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