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water mold

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water mold, common name for a group of multinucleated organisms that superficially resemble fungi Fungi , kingdom of heterotrophic single-celled, multinucleated, or multicellular organisms, including yeasts, molds, and mushrooms. The organisms live as parasites, symbionts, or saprobes (see saprophyte).
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 but are now recognized as having an independent evolutionary lineage and are placed in the kingdom Protista Protista or Protoctista , in the five-kingdom system of classification, a kingdom comprising a variety of unicellular and some simple multinuclear and multicellular eukaryotic organisms.
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. There are two important phyla (divisions) of water molds, the chytrids (Chytridiomycota) and the oomycetes (Oomycota).

The chytrids live in salt- and freshwater and in moist soil. They live as saprobes, obtaining their metabolic energy from decaying plant and animal material, or as parasites parasite, plant or animal that at some stage of its existence obtains its nourishment from another living organism called the host. Parasites may or may not harm the host, but they never benefit it.
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, attacking plants, fungi, and algae. They typically take the form of small coenocytic (multinucleated) masses, called sporangia, from which many hairlike rhizoids protrude. Like roots, the rhizoids absorb nutrients. Reproduction can be by simple division of a sporangium into individual motile, flagellated spores or by more complicated sexual processes that yield flagellated gametes. There are approximately 900 species of chytrids.

The oomycetes resemble fungi, taking the form of coenocytic filaments (hyphae). They differ from fungi, however, in that cellulose is present in their cell walls. The hyphae of oomycetes have specialized regions that can produce distinct male and female gametes. Oomycetes can also reproduce asexually. Many oomycetes are aquatic. Many of the others live in water in certain stages of the life cycle. Most of the 800 species of oomycetes are saprobes, but those that are parasitic are of great significance: they cause downy mildew, a disease often affecting grapes; late blight of potatoes, an outbreak of which led to the Great Potato Famine in Ireland (1845–49); sudden oak death syndrome (also known as ramorum leaf blight or ramorum dieback; redwoods, Douglas firs, and other plants also are harmed by the same water mold); and blue mold of tobacco. Other parasitic water molds cause diseases of fish and fish eggs.



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Byline: ANI Washington, September 10 (ANI): An international team of scientists has decoded the full genetic sequence, or genome, of Phytophthora infestans, which is a water mold that causes the serious potato disease known as late blight or potato blight.
Oomycetes make up the water molds that cause many common fungal infections in fish including tropical aquarium fish, as well as downy mildew that cause serious crop damage around the world every year.
At fish farms, parasitic water mold is a problem because it inhibits the hatching of fish in the salmon family.
 
 
 
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