Learning Objectives
- State the kingdom of mushrooms, yeast, and bread molds
- State the phylum of the bread mold
- State the phylum of the mushroom (club fungi)
- State the phylum of the yeast (sac fungi)
- State if spores are haploid or diploid
- Be able to identify a zygospore.
- Be able to identify hyphae
- Be able to identify the conidiospores and conidiphores of the ascomycota specimens
- Be able to identify the basiodcarp and basidospores and basidia of the mushroom.
- State what two organisms are involved in a symbiotic relationship to create a lichen.
- Give an example of a type of lichen.
http://www.slideshare.net/CandelaContent/fungi-lab-tz1
Download a pdf of the Fungi Lab to print
Procedure
- Access the page “Reading: Fungi.”
- Watch this video:
Questions
- Zygomycota (bread mold): View the prepared slides of the zygospores and sporangia.
- What kind of reproduction is used by the zygomycota?
- Is the zygospore diploid or haploid?
- Draw a picture of the zygospores you viewed under the microscope.
- Ascomycota (sac fungi).
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- We do not have a slide of the Peziza-please view the pictures on the website.
- Aspergillus: View the slides available of Aspergillus.
- Can you find any conidiospores?
- Are conidiospores used in sexual or asexual reproduction?
- Use the space below to draw a picture of the conidiospores as you viewed under the microscope.
- Yeast: create a wet mount slide of the yeast (as assisted by your instructor) to view under the microscope.
- Are yeast single or multi celled?
- Do yeast reproduce asexually or sexually?
- Are you able to view budding, the asexual reproductive process of yeast? Review the Yeast Budding video to help visualize budding.
- When yeast reproduces sexually, what is the name of the diploid cell that is formed?
- We do not have a slide of the Schizosaccharomyces octosporus—please view the pictures on the website.
- Skip over the Morels.
- View the Penicillium slides only, no live specimens.
- Name the specialized stalks that the asexual spores attach to.
- Use the space below to draw a picture of the Penicillium specimen as you viewed it under the microscope.
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- Basidiomycota (club fungi)
- View the mushroom specimens available in the lab. Do not dissect them. See if you can find the gills on the underside of the basidiocarp.
- Name the specific spores formed by the mushroom in the gills.
- View the cross section slide of the Coprinus mushroom.
- Can you locate the basiodispores?
- Name the specific stalk that the basidiospores attach to.
- Use the space below to draw a picture of the Coprinus basidiospores and basidia as you viewed under the microscope.
- View the mushroom specimens available in the lab. Do not dissect them. See if you can find the gills on the underside of the basidiocarp.
- Lichens
- There may or may not be live specimens of the lichens to view in the classroom. If live specimens are present, please look at them.
- What type of lichen is considered to be leaf like?
- What type of lichen is considered to be crusty, growing tightly against the substrate?
- What type of lichen grows in lobes forming branch-like tubes?
- View the lichen thallus slide under the microscope.
- What two organisms create the lichen?
- Use the space below to draw a picture of the lichen thallus as you viewed it under the microscope. On your picture try to label both the fungi and the algae.
- There may or may not be live specimens of the lichens to view in the classroom. If live specimens are present, please look at them.
- Answer the questions below to summarize the lab activity:
- What is the domain of the fungi?
- How do fungi obtain energy?
- What is the reproductive structure of the fungi? It’s not sperm and egg!
- In the lab activity, which groups of fungi prefer to reproduce asexually? Which groups of fungi tend to exhibit sexual reproduction?
- A lichen is a mutualisic relationship between what two organisms?
Candela Citations
CC licensed content, Original
- Biology 102 Labs. Authored by: Lynette Hauser. Provided by: Tidewater Community College. Located at: http://www.tcc.edu/. License: CC BY: Attribution