Phylum Zygomycota

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  • Опубліковано 13 лют 2021
  • The bread molds are something you probably have a lot of familiarity with -- this video explores how they reproduce and get ALL OVER all of your bread.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 35

  • @susanzhu2928
    @susanzhu2928 2 роки тому +9

    Your enthusiasm on the subject makes it way more interesting to learn about, and I like how you used analogies to compare some of the new terms with words that we’re already familiar with! You cleared a lot of my confusion, thank you so much for the video. We really appreciate it :)

    • @ProfessorNewtoff
      @ProfessorNewtoff  2 роки тому +2

      Heya Susan, I really appreciate that feedback! As a student myself, I find analogies can be really helpful especially with terms you have NEVER heard before. I'm glad it's been helpful -- enjoy!

  • @ventsislav1796
    @ventsislav1796 9 місяців тому +3

    You are clever as long as can explain things in a simple way. Many "professors" just are showing ready made images which is not good for them.

  • @madura.samarakoon
    @madura.samarakoon 2 роки тому +2

    Best explanation ever had about this topic.

  • @charvellevanparidon7891
    @charvellevanparidon7891 2 роки тому +4

    I dont comment on here often but I really appreciate your videos so much. I'm dyslexic taking mycology online and I find it very hard to retain what I'm reading and your videos just pull it all together for me. You are very wonderful at teaching.

  • @aubsta1
    @aubsta1 9 місяців тому

    Thanks, Prof. Newtoff!

  • @Oliver-cn6ic
    @Oliver-cn6ic 6 місяців тому

    Your videos are great ! i am a production engineer by trade with some free time on my hands so i decided to start a mycology diploma and your videos really help on the visualisation aspect of learning . Reading often drowns my enthusiasm when trying to absorb new information .
    Thanks

    • @ProfessorNewtoff
      @ProfessorNewtoff  6 місяців тому

      I really appreciate that feedback! Good luck on your diploma -- I too am not a fan of reading :)

    • @Oliver-cn6ic
      @Oliver-cn6ic 6 місяців тому

      @ProfessorNewtoff thankyou kindly. Love the enthusiasm BTW 😁

  • @jademarie1213
    @jademarie1213 11 місяців тому +1

    Thank you for your clarity. The reproductive cycle always seems to complicated- this is clear and easy to understand. ( and I love that you brought Dora the Explorer into the conversation!)

    • @ProfessorNewtoff
      @ProfessorNewtoff  11 місяців тому

      Thank you so much Jade! Now to be open, there ARE more steps and side cycles and such but the cycle I review in here is the foundation. If you are taking a class, be sure to review your textbook and other course materials as your instructor may want more detail from you! Good luck!

  • @MrTimjwilson
    @MrTimjwilson 9 місяців тому

    Good job.

  • @daramarie2925
    @daramarie2925 2 роки тому +3

    If you're my teacher, I'm never going to sleep in class again

    • @ProfessorNewtoff
      @ProfessorNewtoff  2 роки тому +1

      If you could just tell my students that... but thank you!

  • @nosasal9310
    @nosasal9310 3 роки тому +2

    OMG that is amazing !! That is what i was looking for thank u sooo much

  • @jonathanmwela409
    @jonathanmwela409 2 роки тому +1

    Best explanation

  • @Navina62
    @Navina62 Рік тому

    Awsome teacher 🙂

  • @abhishekchaudhary4072
    @abhishekchaudhary4072 3 роки тому +1

    Very nice mam 👍❤️

  • @HammerLexRArceo
    @HammerLexRArceo 2 роки тому +1

    u deserve more subscribers👍

  • @davidchavez1553
    @davidchavez1553 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you.

    • @davidchavez1553
      @davidchavez1553 2 роки тому +1

      Wow so brilliant. Mycology is essential to learning to decompose the waste or wise sapiens have made. Love it. Can't wait to understand and indulge in your other videos.

    • @ProfessorNewtoff
      @ProfessorNewtoff  2 роки тому +2

      I appreciate that, thank you!!

  • @swarnilkamble4758
    @swarnilkamble4758 4 місяці тому

    Very 👍

  • @platylobiumSp
    @platylobiumSp 2 роки тому +1

    Hi,
    Thanks for the fantastic explanations, you are such a great and engaging teacher. I take Soil Ecology and Ecology/Environmental Science with a particular interest in mycology, so these sorts of videos help quite a bit as there are no dedicated mycology courses at my University.
    One question you may be able to help with: a lot of information about fungi is either rather simple and straightforward (such as the life cycle, type of mycorrhizal association, Taxonomical classifications, fungal respiration), or incredibly complex (of which I can't describe as its well beyond me, but talking about particular amino acids etc etc). Once you reach a level of understanding that goes beyond the introduction to fungi, what would you recommend the next steps are? I have access to an enormous library of journals and many libraries at my University/city, so it's likely I'll be able to access whatever resources you may suggest.
    Hopefully you can help me out better than my botany lecturers (not that they aren't helpful!)

    • @ProfessorNewtoff
      @ProfessorNewtoff  2 роки тому

      Oh thank you! And great question -- you're right that there is a great dichotomy between simple introduction to super complex. My recommendation for the in-between would be a textbook. I personally only use free textbooks, which may not be as in depth, see OpenStax (openstax.org/books/biology-2e/pages/24-introduction). I'm sure fungi textbooks exist, and would be your best bet. Scientific journals will get very technical, very quickly. While they are definitely interesting, may not be the in-between you are looking for.

    • @platylobiumSp
      @platylobiumSp 2 роки тому

      @@ProfessorNewtoff thanks for the quick response. I'll take a look at textbooks; the openstax one looks great, so hoping to order a copy to have a hard copy (reading from a screen sucks sometimes). Hope to see you continue to make videos on fungal biology and ecological function

  • @Yes-oo8rv
    @Yes-oo8rv 4 місяці тому

    So asca (asci?) have 8 ascospores each, basidium have 4 basidiospores each, but sporangium have tons?

    • @ProfessorNewtoff
      @ProfessorNewtoff  4 місяці тому +1

      You got it! (And yes, it is asci, and basidia is the plural form). But, keep in mind there are thousands of asci and basidia on those shrooms, so even though sporangia have tons of spores inside of them, there's only one sporangium.

    • @Yes-oo8rv
      @Yes-oo8rv 4 місяці тому

      @@ProfessorNewtoff Thank you!

  • @ventsislav1796
    @ventsislav1796 9 місяців тому

    Dear Professor, I beg you, please, explain what the Meiosis is, since it's a good try to explain the events, but it's not clear what does n or 2n mean! I'm a medical doctor and as fas as I remember in some point of Meiosis there is a tetraploid genom - after Interface before Profase 1.

    • @ProfessorNewtoff
      @ProfessorNewtoff  9 місяців тому

      I wish I had a video where I could link you to! So I'll try to leave a brief comment. Meiosis is when you go from a diploid cell to a haploid cell. A diploid cell is a cell that has two sets of chromosomes, and is denoted 2n. For example, human skin cells, brain cells, and muscle cells have two copies of our 23 chromosomes (so 46 total, one copy is from mom, and one copy is from dad). In MITOSIS, cells are simply replicating. So a 2n cell will create two 2n cells. In MEIOSIS, the number of chromosomes is halved, for example going from 2n to n. In humans, we do this process in our ovaries and testes to create eggs and sperm, respectively. For humans, we go through meiosis to create sex cells -- but this isn't the case as we see here and in plants, which is why I emphasize going from 2n to n. There is an initial duplication where Meiosis I goes from one 2n cell to two 2n cells, and in Meiosis II, each of those cells creates two n cells (so one 2n cell to four n cells).

  • @user-gt1yu2nb8h
    @user-gt1yu2nb8h Рік тому

    remind me of saul goodman