In this article we will discuss about Classification of Fungi by Alexopoulos and Mims (1979)
Table of Contents
Classification of Fungi by Alexopoulos and Mims (1979)
- C. J. Alexopoulos and C. W. Mims (1979) placed fungi and slime molds under their own kingdom called Myceteae.
- The kingdom fungi is divided into 3 divisions, 8 subdivisions, 11 classes and 1 form class
Kingdom: Myceteae (Fungi)
- Achlorophyllous
- Heterotrophs
- Unicellular or filamentous soma (thallus)
- Chitinous cell wall
- Reserve food material is glycogen and oil droplets
- On the basis of presence or absence of cell wall, centriole and flagellate cells in life cycle, the kingdom myceteae divided is into three major divisions: Gymnomycota, Mastigomycota and Amastigomycota
Division I: Gymnomycota
- Phagotrophic organism
- Lack of cell walls
- This division comprises two subdivisions: Acrasiogymnomycotina and Plasmodiogynomycotina
Subdivision 1. Acrasiogymnomycotina
- These are Commonly known as cellular slime molds
- They exist as individual amoeboid cells
- Under unfavourable condition, these individual cells aggregate to form a multicellular slug-like structure called a pseudoplasmodium.
- It includes a single class Acrasiomycetes.
Class : Acrasiomycetes
- Most abundantly found in upper layers of humus in well established deciduous forests and as well as in soils.
- Flagellated cells absent.
- E.g., Dictyostelium
Subdivision 2. Plasmodiogymnomycotina
- These are commonly known as plasmodial slime molds.
- They exist as multinucleate mass of protoplasm called a plasmodium
- The plasmodium engulfs food particles as it moves and grows.
- It is divided into two classes: Protosteliomycetes and Mycomy
Class : Protosteliomycetes
- Primitive slime molds, mostly found in soil, dung, humus, dead wood, tree bark and plant remains.
- Myxamoebae do not aggregate before fruiting.
- E.g., Protostelium
Class : Mycomycetes
- True slime molds, distributed world wide, found on moist soil, decaying wood and dung.
- Sometimes fruiting bodies are conspicuously coloured.
- E.g., Physarum, Fuligo
Division II: Mastigomycota
- Absorptive nutrition
- Mycelium is coenocytic
- Fungi with centrioles
- Flagellate cells produced durĀing life cycle
- Asexual reproduction typically by zoospores
- This division comprises two subdivisions: Haplomastigomycotina and Diplomastigomycotina
Subdivision 1: Haplomastigomycotina
- They are flagellate fungi, producing either uniflagellate or biflagellate zoospores
- Life cycle either haplobiontic (haploid) or diplobiontic (diploid)
- Some are aquatic, while others are endoparasitic slime moulds.
- It is divided into three classes: Chytridiomycetes, Hyphochytridiomycetes and Plasmodiophoromycetes
Class : Chytridiomycetes
- Occur commonly in aquatic habitats and many in soil.
- Posteriorly attached uniflagellate zoospores, flagella whiplash type.
- E.g., Chytrids, Allomyces
Class : Hyphochytridiomycetes
- Aquatic fungi found in fresh and marine conditions.
- Thallus may or may not bear rhizoids.
- Anteriorly attached uniflagellate zoospores.
- Flagella tinsel type.
- E.g., Rhizidiomyces, Hyphochytrium
Class : Plasmodiophoromycetes
- They are obligate endoparasites.
- Attaching many economically important plants like cabbage and potato.
- Life cycle includes two district plasmodial phases.
- Zoospores are biflagellate, flagella unequal in length, anterior and whiplash type.
- E.g., Plasmodiophora
Subdivision 2: Diplomastigomycotina
- They are flagellate fungi, producing latral biflagellate zoospores (one whiplash and another tins flagellum)
- Sexual reproduction is oogamous type.
- It includes a single class Oomycetes
Class : Oomycetes
- Found in a variety of habitats, majority are aquatic.
- Live parasitically on algae, water molds, aquatic insects and other animals and plants.
- Mycelium is well branched, filamentous and coenocytic.
- Cell wall contains cellulose.
- Many members produce non-motile conidia.
- E.g., Pythium, Phytophthora
Division III: Amastigomycota
- Absorptive nutrition
- Mycelium aseptate or septate
- Fungi without centriole
- Motile cells are absent throughout life cycle
- This division comprises four subdivisions: Zygomycotina, Ascomycotina, Basidiomycotina and Deuteromycotina
Subdivision 1: Zygomycotina
- The hyphae is coenocytic (lacking septa, multinucleate)
- Asexual reproduction by non-motile spores (Aplanospores) produced in sporangia and no zoospores produced
- Sexual reproduction by zygospore produced by the fusion of two morphologically identical gametes.
- It is divided into two classes: Zygomycetes and Trichomycetes
Class : Zygomycetes
- Mostly terrestrial in habitat, living in soil or on decaying plant or animal material.
- Some are parasites of plants, insects, while others form symbiotic relationships with plants.
- Mycelium coenocytic, forming septa only where gametes are formed.
- Perfect stage condition is zygospore.
- E.g. Rhizopus, Phycomyces
Class : Trichomycetes
- These fungi are parasitic, found within the digestive tract of living arthropods and guts of earthworms.
- The hosts of Trichomycetes include marine, freshwater and terrestrial arthropods.
- Asexual reproduction takes place by trichospores, sporangiospores, arthrospores or amoebiod cells.
- Sexual reproduction takes place by biconial zygospores.
- E.g. Smittium
Subdivision 2: Ascomycotina
- They are called higher fungi and more complex in structure
- A short-lived dikaryotic stage is present in-between plasmogamy and karyogamy.
- It includes a single class Ascomycetes
Class : Ascomycetes
- Commonly known as sac-fungi, mostly fungi are multicellular or rarely unicellular e.g. yeast.
- They are saprophytic, decomposers, parasitic or coprophilous.
- Perfect stage condition is ascospores, 8 ascospores produce in sac like structure called as ascus, asexual spores are conidia produced exogenously on conidiophores.
- Conidia on germination produce mycelium.
- E.g. Penicillium, Aspergillus and Neurospora
Subdivision 3: Basidiomycotina
- They have septate mycelium
- produces basidiopores (meiospores) exogenously on basidia.
- It includes a single class Basidiomycetes
Class : Basidiomycetes
- They are terrestrial, saprophytic or parasitic.
- Saprophytic fungi cause decay of wood, litter, dung, wet leaves and other organic matter.
- Many toadstools form mycorrhizal associations wither higher plants and prove extremely valuable in nature.
- The hyphae penetrate the substratum to absorb the food.
- The mycelium is of primary, secondary and tertiary types.
- Dolipore septa are present in most of the genera.
- They reproduce asexually by conidium, arthrospore, oidia, fragmentation or budding.
- The perfect state spores are basidiospore, which develops on a basidium.
- E.g. Agaricus, Puccinia, Pleurotus etc.
Subdivision 4: Deuteromycotina
- It includes imperfect fungi in which sexual stage is unknown.
- The members of this class mostly resemble to Ascomycetes and Basidiomycetes in structure and reproduction.
- It includes a single form class Deuteromycetes
Form class : Deuteromycetes
- The deuteromycetes are commonly called fungi imperfecti or imperfect fungi
- They are saprophytes as well as parasites. Parasitic fungi cause serious diseases to plants, animals including human beings.
- They reproduce asexually by conidia along with some other types of spores.
- The sexual reproduction is entirely absent.
- E.g., Alternaria, Fusarium, Helminthosporium etc.
Reference
Sullia, S. B., & Shantharam, S. (2019). General Microbiology. Oxford and IBH Publishing.
Sinha, A. K. (1962). Botany for degree students fungi. S. Chand Publishing.
Devasahayam, H. L. (2009). Illustrated plant pathology: Basic Concepts. New India Publishing.
Aryal, S. (2022, September 5). Classification of Fungi by Alexopoulos and Mims. Microbe Notes. https://microbenotes.com/classification-of-fungi/
Mahadev Kanade. (2020, October 27). Classification of Fungi by Alexopoulos and Mims [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G-6WeofNJOI