BIOL 209- Midterm Exam Guide - Comprehensive Notes for the exam ( 32 pages long!)

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Mycelium: whole body of fungus (pl. mycelia) Hypha: thread like part of the body: grow at their tips, establish new growing points to be able to branch out. Thalus: body of organism, no stems, leaves (pl. thalli) Amoebae are unicellular and move by extending their pseudopods (s. amoeba: they"re wall-less, microscopic protists. Fungal hyphae, unlike amoebae, are strong due to tough cell walls and cross walls: septum: branch like part (pl. septa, cross wall: non-living cell wall material. Tips are zones of active growth: (use the picture to the right to answer the next question) the middle arrow points at which stained structure, mitochondrion, plasma membrane, endoplasmic reticulum, golgi, septum. Turgor pressure: h2o into hypha by osmosis, pressure results in elongation at the tip. Hydrolic force causes organelles to move towards the tip. Active synthesis of new cytoplasm and new cell wall. Organelles migrate towards the top, through septal pores, during growth.

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