What are Fungi?

Fly agaric

Is it Mushroom or Fungi?

It is fungi, a member of the Fungal kingdom. Hyphae grows below the ground, multiple hyphae together is called mycelium. The mushroom is the fruiting body above the ground.  When fungi forms a symbiotic partnership with plants this is called arbuscular mycorrhizae[1].

Labelled diagram of a fungi
Image Credit: Fungal Friends

Certain fungi produce a fruiting body, similarly to apples on an apple tree. The fungi fills its hyphal tissues with water and pushes a mushroom above ground, where it grows and releases spores. Picking the mushrooms will not cause the death of the fungi, just as picking apples from the tree will not kill the tree. (The only exception to this is Cordyceps, where the fungi is attached to an insect, and all hyphae are in the insect.)

There are many very interesting looking fungi, for some images of the variety, check out the gallery.

Fungal foraging is an interesting hobby, and as soon as you start you will see mushrooms everywhere! Just take care when picking mushrooms, if you are not certain of the identification, do not eat it until you are certain. 

There are more fungi on Earth than there are animals[1]!

How Fungi Interact with Plant Partners

Arbuscular fungi – form vesicles, arbuscules, spores and hyphae in the rhizosphere [2]. Nutrients are exchanged through the arbuscules which reside inside the root cells for direct transfer between the fungi and the plants [11].

The arbuscules reach the cortical cells of the host plant through hyphal growth, being attracted by the plant. These cells form a layer between the surface (epidermis) of the root cells and the vascular (conducting) central part of the cell. [10].

The hyphae is able to penetrate the cell wall using polarised exocytosis at the apex. This is a charged area forming at the end of the hyphae whilst it is outside the cell [16].

The tip of the hyphae grows and forms the apex. This is supported through the transport of growth supplies, such as membranes and proteins, through motors along the exoskeleton of the hyphal shaft [16]. This enables the tip of the hyphae to move through the soil, and the cell wall. The soft hyphae is protected by this reinforced protein rich tip.