NAME:
EXAM 1 - General Mycology 427/527
Multiple
Choice:
Circle
all the correct answers. There may
be more than one correct answer.
(0.5 points for each correct answer)
1. Unlike plants, fungi
a. have cellulose in their cell walls
b. are unable to fix CO2
c. reproduce by spores
d. lack a plasma membrane
e. lack chlorophyll
2. All organisms in the kingdom Fungi
a. use the same pathway to synthesize
lysine
b. contain chitin in their cell walls
c. have cellulose in their cell walls
d. reproduce sexually at some point in a
year
e. lack motile cells in their life cycle
3. Absorptive nutrition means that fungi
a. secrete digestive enzymes that break
down organic matter externally
b. absorb food, such as cellulose, and
break it down internally
c. engulf their food and digest it inside
their cytoplasm
d. absorb CO2 and N2
from the atmosphere for food
4.
The fungus-like organisms of the kingdom Stramenopila differ from those
in the kingdom Fungi by
a. containing cellulose in their cell
walls
b. having motile cells with tinsel
flagella
c. the lack of a plasma membrane
d. the lack of a cell wall
e. the pathway they use to synthesize
lysine
5.
Apical growth in Fungi depends on
a. vesicles in hyphal tips
b. budding
c. chitin synthase
d. turgor pressure
e. septum formation
6. A teleomorph is
a. a survival structure of fungi composed
of tightly wound hyphae
b. the type of conidium produced by
thallic conidiation
c. the name of the asexual form of a
fungus
d. the name of the sexual form of a fungus
e. the name used to refer to most fungi when
both the asexual and sexual forms are known
7. Chitin
a. is a fibrillar component of fungal cell
walls
b. is N-acetyl glucosamine
c. is glucose
d. is a polymer of N-acetyl glucosamine
e. is a polymer of glucose
8. Saprobes are essential to life on earth
because
a. they consume C02 which would
otherwise build up to toxic levels
b. they recycle organic material to
produce inorganic compounds
c. they remove excess debris that other
organisms produce
d. grow in association with the roots of
most plants, providing scarce minerals to the plants
9. Asexual reproduction in fungi requires
a. meiosis
b. mitosis
c. formation of conidia
d. karyogamy
10.
Septa are
a. hyphal survival structures
b. crosswalls that separate fungal cells
c. present only in coenocytic hyphae
d. used to distinguish the Ascomycota from
the Basidiomycota
e. infection structures used to penetrate
plant cell walls
11.
A fungal survival structure may be
a.
a sporangiospore
b. an appressorium
c.
a haustorium
d.
a sclerotium
e.
a conidium
f. a septum
12. The majority of fungal species
a. are pathogens
b. are saprobes
c. lack cell walls during vegetative
growth
d. are eukaryotic
e. are quite possibly not yet identified
13.
Features required in the proper name of a fungal species are
a. a genus name and a species epithet
b. the species epithet is sufficient
c. genus name and species epithet
underlined, or in italics
d. capitalization of the first letter of
the genus name, but not the species epithet
e. the genus name will end in ÒmycotaÓ
14. The growth unit of a filamentous fungus
is
a. a single cell
b. a fixed length of a hypha
c. a variable length of hypha which may
vary with nutritional conditions
d. an asexual spore
e. the amount of a hypha that supports the
growth of a single hyphal tip
15. An asexual spore may be called a
a. ascospore
b. conidiophore
c. sporangiospore
d. conidium
e. haustorium
16.
A mode of conidiation where the cell wall of the conidium is not continuous with the cell wall of the
conidiogenous cell may be called
a. holoblastic conidiation
b. enteroblastic conidiation
c. blastic acropetal conidiation
d. blastic phialidic conidiation
e. blastic annellidic conidiation
17. In blastic acropetal conidiation
a. the youngest conidium is at the top of the
conidial chain
b. the youngest conidium is at the base of the
conidial chain
c. cytoplasmic streaming occurs from the
conidiophore through the other conidia in a chain
d. preformed hyphal segments are converted into
conidia
e.
the contents of the conidiophore are cleaved to produce spores within it
18. The sexual cycle in filamentous fungi
a. produces more spores in general than
the asexual cycle
b. involves a series of genetically programmed events that promote genetic recombination
c. requires karyogamy and meiosis
d. may produce either haploid or diploid spores
depending on the fungal species
e. is also known as the anamorph stage of
a fungal species
19. Branching in filamentous fungi
a. allows exponential growth of hyphal
tips
b. allows exponential growth of a fungal
colony
c. increases in a nutrient rich
environment
d.
requires chitin synthase to break down the rigid cell wall of a fungal
cell back from the main tip of a fungal hypha
20.
Slime molds differ from both the Stramenopila and the true Fungi because
they
a. lack a cell wall during vegetative
growth
b. lack a plasma membrane during
vegetative growth
c. use a phagocytic mode of nutrition
d. reproduce by production of sporangiospores
instead of conidia
Matching: Place the correct letter from the right hand column by the correct
phylum in the left hand column. (2
points per answer)
1) Ascomycota a)
chitin in cell wall, no known sexual stage
2) Chytridiomycota b)
cellulose in cell walls, use the DAP lysine biosynthetic pathway
3) Deuteromycota c)
septa are dolipore, sexual spores produced on club-shaped structures
4) Oomycota d)
coenocytic hyphae, asexual spores are non-motile sporangiospores
5) Basidiomycota e)
chitin in cell wall, zoospores with a posterior whiplash flagellum
6) Zygomycota f)
hyphae septate with simple septa, asexual spores are conidia, sexual spores
contained in a sac
Short
Answers: Answer the following questions briefly
and concisely. Points listed by
each question.
1. Are
yeasts filamentous fungi? Support
your answer : (2 pts)
2. Draw
and label a sporangiophore, sporangiospore and sporangium. How does sporangiosporogenesis differ
from conidiogenesis? (4 pts)
3. Describe
and draw the differences between blastic and thallic conidiation. (3 pts)
4. What
are two advantages of asexual reproduction as compared to sexual reproduction
for a fungus? ( 2 pts)
5. a.
What is a haustorium? Describe the
details of its structure and how it functions. (You may include a drawing to
assist your explanation)(2 pts)
5b.
Why are they important for the growth of obligate parasites? (2 pts)
5c. (EXTRA CREDIT) Would you expect an obligate parasite
or a facultative parasite to have a wider range of distribution? Why? (2 pts)
6. a. Describe what plasmogamy, karyogamy and
meiosis are, and their roles in sexual reproduction in fungi. (4.5 points)
b. Describe how the relative timing of the events in 6a determine whether an organism is haploid, or diploid during the asexual phase of its lifecycle. (3 points)
True/False: Write true or false to
the left of each answer. (1 point each)
1. Morphological characters are more
accurate indicators of evolutionary relatedness than DNA sequences
2. A polyphyletic group of organisms
defined as an ancestor and all its descendants.
3. All sporangiospores are motile spores
4.
Chitin synthase is required for cell wall growth of the Oomcyota
5.
All pathogens are parasites
6. A
fungal spore is an embryo
Definitions: (in 15 words or less) (1.5 pts per definition)
hypha
coenocytic
sclerotium
appressorium
facultative parasite
coprophilous
dikaryon
EXTRA CREDIT: What
question did you expect to be on this test that is not here? What is the answer? (sliding points from 1 to 5 pts
depending on the complexity of the question and answer. Your question could appear on next
yearÕs exam!!!)