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Exam (elaborations)

Brooks Biodiversity Unit 2 Exam

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Brooks Biodiversity Unit 2 Exam

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Brooks Biodiversity Unit 2
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Brooks Biodiversity Unit 2

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November 21, 2025
Number of pages
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Written in
2025/2026
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Brooks Biodiversity Unit 2 Exam


The Primary role of Fungi - ANSWERDecomposers- they break things down



Modes of Nutrition in Fungi - ANSWERHeterotrophs with extracellular digestion



Exoenzymes - ANSWERFungi Release these enzymes outside of the cell wall. Break down complex
molecules into smaller organic molecules which can be absorbed.



Extracellular Digestion - ANSWERThe release of exoenzymes out side of the cell wall, followed by the
absorption of nutrients..



Saprobes - ANSWERFungi that feed on non-living/dead organisms



Symbionts - ANSWERFungus that lives with another living organism (form a symbiotic relationship)



Mutualism in Fungi - ANSWERboth organisms benefit, neither is harmed.

Ex: Lichens - fungi and algae (cyanobacteria)

Ex: Mycorrhizae - fungi and plant roots



Commensalism - ANSWEROne organism benefits, the other is unharmed



Parasitism - ANSWEROne organism benefits, the other is harmed

,Examples of Parasitism in Fungi - ANSWEREx: Fungus as a human parasite (Athelete's Foot)

Ex: Fungus as a plant parasite

1. black stem rust on wheat

2. ergots on rye

3. strawberries with botrytis mold

4. pink ear rot of corn



Black Stem Rust - ANSWERParasitic relationship with fungus and plant. Occurs on wheat



Ergots - ANSWERParasitic relationship with fungus and plant that occurs on rye and gives
hallucinogenic sensations



Botrytis Mold - ANSWERParasitic relationship with fungus and plants that occurs on strawberries



Fungi Characteristics - ANSWER1. Heterotrophic

2. Extracellular Digestion

3. Chitin-Based Cell wall

4. Most fungi are made up of filaments called Hyphae



Hyphae - ANSWERfilaments (long and branching) that make up the structure of a fungus

In most fungi, hyphae are the main mode of vegetative growth

Hyphae are Septate or Coenocytic



Yeast - ANSWERYeast is a unicellular fungi and do not have/grow hyphae

MOST FUNGI ARE MULTICELLULAR, BUT YEAST IS UNICELLULAR

, Septate - ANSWERYou can see the cell separation because the nuclei are confined in and separated by
cell walls

Think "separate"



Coenocytic - ANSWERYou cant see the cell separation. It is multinucleated meaning that there are
multiple nuclei not separated by a cell wall



Thallus/Mycelium - ANSWERcollectively refers to a bunch of hyphae that together make up the body of
the fungus

Hyphae (smallest unit) make up the mycelium (entire fungus body)



Haustoria - ANSWERThe hyphal tip of a parasitic fungus that penetrates the cell of other organisms (the
host)

After penetration these specialized hyphae release enzymes that break down the cell wall, thus allowing
greater potential movement of organic carbon from host to fungus.



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q1ANSWERFungiq1haveq1cellq1wallsq1andq1fruitingq1bodies,q1soq1wereq1originallyq1thoughtq1toq1beq1pla
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Fungiq1Nucleiq1-q1ANSWERMostq1fungiq1cellsq1haveq12q1nuclei



Mitosisq1-
q1ANSWERHasq1NOq1prerequisiteq1forq1cellq1division,q1allq1itq1needsq1isq1aq1nucleus.q1Whatq1youq1star
tq1withq1isq1whatq1youq1endq1withq1(identicalq1nucleiq1andq1identicalq1DNA)



Meiosisq1-
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eq1parentq1cellq1isq1halved



3q1Typesq1ofq1Meiosisq1-q1ANSWERZygoticq1-q1Phylumq1Zygomycota

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