Fungi of Southern Africa & South Africa:

The Fungi Kingdom

Mycology: (mai-ko-la-gee) - the scientific study of fungi.

Mushrooms and Fungi have always been regarded with a touch of scepticism, not until fairly recently did we understand the full complexities of how and why fungi form. For centuries people believed that toadstools were considered poisonous and mushrooms were edible, they believed that these fungi were associated with the breath of snakes, or if growing near rusted iron or dirty rags they were sure to be poisonous. There are scores of false beliefs that cast a negative shadow over these humble life forms, and perhaps due to the nature of their ability to appear and disappear overnight, particularly after rains, people could not understand their role in nature.

Their role however is vital. They are one of the largest contributors of the decomposition of organic matter, returning nutrients to the soil, which in turn is utilised to sustain other species of flora and fauna. The majority of the fungi cannot be seen with the naked eye, and needs to be viewed with a lens or microscope. Our most common association with mushrooms are those we use for the dinner table, these and other edible and non-edible mushrooms are referred to as "fruit-bodies". This is the common name given to the organism that seems to pop-up out of the ground for no apparent reason.

Or so we thought. The production unit of all fungi is known as the "spore". When this spore lands on a suitable substrate or base, and growth conditions are ideal, it will germinate by sending out a germ tube which becomes attached to the base or substrate. This tube develops in to the "hyphae", which in turn will expand and develop into a network of hyphal threads, known as "mycelium". This mycelium is the vegetative body of the fungus responsible for its nutrition and formation. The mycelium will continue to grow and branch throughout the substrate for as long as it can obtain nutrients from it, and conditions of temperature and moisture remain favourable. This mycelium may continue to grow for a long time without forming any sex organs, but once two sexually differentiated mycelia meet, and plasmas of conjugating cells unite, if external conditions are ideal, a "fruit-body" will appear.

Mushrooms belong neither to the animal nor plant kingdom, but form a phylum all on their own. This is due to the fact that unlike plants, fungi are unable to produce their own food through photosynthesis, as they lack chlorophyll, but resemble animals in their ability to draw their sustenance from animal and plant matter which is dissolved by enzymes and ingested. Current estimates put the number of species in the fungal kingdom at approximately 1.5 million, in comparison with, for example, flowering plants at 250,000 species.

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