• Source: Rhizophydiales
  • Rhizophydiales are an important group of chytrid fungi. They are found in soil as well as marine and fresh water habitats where they function as parasites and decomposers.


    Role in the environment



    Rhizophydiales are parasites of a range of organisms, including invertebrates, other chytrids and algae, and they may have a role in natural control of aquatic populations, especially phytoplankton. One member, Rhizophydium graminis, is a parasite of wheat roots, but causes no extensive damage to the plant. The only documented cases of a chytrid parasitizing vertebrates are Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis and Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans, members of this order. They are highly destructive pathogens of frogs and salamanders respectively.
    The majority of the described saprotrophic species of this order are biodegraders of pollen, with only a few growing on keratin, chitin, and cellulose. The transformational role of the Rhizophydiales in aquatic food webs is little studied but recently more recognized.


    Life history


    Their thalli (=bodies) consist of two parts: an absorptive branching rhizoidal system that contains no nuclei and a multinucleate sporangium that ranges in shape from spherical, to oval, to pear-shaped, and to multi-lobed. The rhizoids attach the thallus to a substrate (food source) and absorbs nutrients. When the thallus is fully grown, the sporangium releases numerous, unwalled, uninucleate-zoospores, each bearing a single posteriorly directed flagellum.
    The zoospore has to use its own stored food reserves (lipids and glycogen) as it swims until it attaches to a suitable host or substrate, absorbs its flagellum, produces a wall around itself, grows a germ tube that penetrates the substrate, and develops into a new thallus. Zoospores of parasitic chytrids use light and chemical cues to locate hosts. Zoospores of Rhizophydium littoreum, a parasite of marine green algae, are positively phototactic toward blue light, a mechanism that might assure that zoospores swim to the photic zone where its host resides. Zoospores of both R. littoreum and B. dendrobatidis exhibit chemotaxis to specific sugars, proteins and amino acids, also a mechanism by which zoospores might detect signals to potential hosts.
    Sexual reproduction is more rarely reported and occurs when two adjacent sporangia function as gametangia with one transferring all of its cytoplasmic contents into the other, resulting in the development of a thick-walled, lipid-laden resting spore.


    Phylogeny


    Based on the work of "The Mycota: A Comprehensive Treatise on Fungi as Experimental Systems for Basic and Applied Research", Powell and Letcher 2015


    Taxonomic classification


    The Rhizophydiales is an order of fungi that includes the following families and genera:

    Aquamycetaceae Letcher 2008
    Aquamyces Letcher 2008
    Alphamycetaceae Letcher 2008
    Alphamyces Letcher 2008
    Betamyces Letcher 2012
    Gammamyces Letcher 2012
    Angulomycetaceae Letcher 2008
    Angulomyces Letcher 2008
    Batrachochytriaceae Doweld 2013
    Batrachochytrium Longcore, Pessier & D.K. Nichols 1999 (no clear relatives known in 2007)
    Homolaphlyctis Longcore, Letcher & T.Y. James 2011
    Coralloidiomycetaceae Doweld 2014
    Coralloidiomyces Letcher 2008
    Dinomycetaceae Karpov & Guillou 2014
    Dinomyces Karpov & Guillou 2014
    Globomycetaceae Letcher 2008
    Globomyces Letcher 2008
    Urceomyces Letcher 2008
    Gorgonomycetaceae Letcher 2008
    Gorgonomyces Letcher 2008
    Halomycetaceae Letcher & Powell 2015
    Halomyces (Amon) Letcher & M.J. Powell 2015
    Paludomyces Letcher & M.J. Powell 2015
    Paranamyces Letcher & M.J. Powell 2015
    Ulkenomyces Letcher & M.J. Powell 2015
    Kappamycetaceae Letcher 2006
    Kappamyces Letcher & M.J. Powell 2005
    Operculomycetaceae Doweld 2014
    Operculomyces M.J.Powell, Letcher & Longcore 2011
    Pateramycetaceae Letcher 2008
    Pateramyces Letcher 2008
    Protrudomycetaceae Letcher 2008
    Protrudomyces Letcher 2008
    Rhizophydiaceae Werderm. 1954 [Tylochytriaceae Doweld 2014]
    Rhizophydium Schenk 1858
    Staurastromycetaceae Van den Wyngaert et al. 2017
    Staurastromyces Van den Wyngaert et al. 2017
    Terramycetaceae Letcher 2006
    Boothiomyces Letcher 2006
    Terramyces Letcher 2006
    Uebelmesseromycetaceae Powell & Letcher 2015
    Uebelmesseromyces Powell & Letcher 2015


    Biodiversity


    New species and genera are still being discovered in this order. A member of this order, Kappamyces, was the first phylogenetic genus of a chytrid circumscribed based primarily on monophyly demonstrated in molecular sequence analysis and confirmed with unique zoospore structure Coralloidiomyces digitatus defied the original view held that the thallus of members of the Rhizophydiales was conservative. Collected from submersed mud at the edge of an oligotrophic lake in southern Argentina near the Andes in Patagonia, C. digitatus has a thallus with a sporangium shaped like a coral.


    References




    External links



    Chytrid Fungi Online: by the University of Alabama
    Rhizophydiales
    Impact of chytrid fungus on frogs (Foundation for National Parks & Wildlife)

Kata Kunci Pencarian: