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Fungi Relationships and Interactions

Human-Fungus Interactions

  • Beneficial Effects of Fungi

    • Decomposition - nutrient and carbon recycling.

    • Biosynthetic factories. Can be used to produce drugs, antibiotics, alcohol, acids, food (e.g., fermented products, mushrooms).

    • Model organisms for biochemical and genetic studies.

  • Harmful Effects of Fungi

    • Destruction of food, lumber, paper, and cloth.

    • Animal and human diseases (mycosis), including allergies.

    • Toxins produced by poisonous mushrooms and within food (e.g., grain, cheese, etc.).

    • Plant diseases.

Ecological Impacts of Fungi

  • Ecosystems depend on fungi as decomposers and symbionts: they decompose food, wood and even plastics!

  • Some fungi are pathogens

    • Plants particularly susceptible (e.g. Dutch elm disease)

    • Ergot - affects cereal crops: causes gangrene, hallucinations and “St. Anthony’s fire”

  • Many animals, including humans, eat fungi:

    • In US, mushroom consumption restricted to Agaricus

    • We eat a range of cultivated and wild mushrooms

    • Truffles are underground ascocarps of mycelia that are mycorrhizal on tree roots

Animal-Fungus Symbioses

  • Some fungi share their digestive services with animals

  • These fungi help break down plant material in the guts of cows and other grazing mammals

  • Many species of ants use the digestive power of fungi by raising them in “farms”

Fungus-Plant Mutualisms

  • Mycorrhizae are enormously important in natural ecosystems and agriculture

  • Plants harbor harmless symbiotic endophytes

    • Endophytes: fungi that live inside leaves or other plant parts

  • Endophytes make toxins that deter herbivores and defend against pathogens

  • Most endophytes are ascomycetes

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Fungi Relationships and Interactions

Human-Fungus Interactions

  • Beneficial Effects of Fungi

    • Decomposition - nutrient and carbon recycling.

    • Biosynthetic factories. Can be used to produce drugs, antibiotics, alcohol, acids, food (e.g., fermented products, mushrooms).

    • Model organisms for biochemical and genetic studies.

  • Harmful Effects of Fungi

    • Destruction of food, lumber, paper, and cloth.

    • Animal and human diseases (mycosis), including allergies.

    • Toxins produced by poisonous mushrooms and within food (e.g., grain, cheese, etc.).

    • Plant diseases.

Ecological Impacts of Fungi

  • Ecosystems depend on fungi as decomposers and symbionts: they decompose food, wood and even plastics!

  • Some fungi are pathogens

    • Plants particularly susceptible (e.g. Dutch elm disease)

    • Ergot - affects cereal crops: causes gangrene, hallucinations and “St. Anthony’s fire”

  • Many animals, including humans, eat fungi:

    • In US, mushroom consumption restricted to Agaricus

    • We eat a range of cultivated and wild mushrooms

    • Truffles are underground ascocarps of mycelia that are mycorrhizal on tree roots

Animal-Fungus Symbioses

  • Some fungi share their digestive services with animals

  • These fungi help break down plant material in the guts of cows and other grazing mammals

  • Many species of ants use the digestive power of fungi by raising them in “farms”

Fungus-Plant Mutualisms

  • Mycorrhizae are enormously important in natural ecosystems and agriculture

  • Plants harbor harmless symbiotic endophytes

    • Endophytes: fungi that live inside leaves or other plant parts

  • Endophytes make toxins that deter herbivores and defend against pathogens

  • Most endophytes are ascomycetes