Molds are in the phylum- fungi. These are special plants that are incapable of making their own foods.
This answer was given by another person, im not actually sure what the real answer is but it is not this. Fungi is actually a kingdom NOT a phylum
the phylum fungus(black mold) belongs to the diggibootii
not even close: Ascomycota This is really bad for someone who thinks they can learn on this site. Basidiophyta
Belongs to the phylum zygomycota
the phylum of slime mold is Myxomycota.
Fungi
itis genies
Phylum Phaeophyta and Phylum Rhodophya
The Ascomycota type, which are truffles and yeasts procreate sexually. Imperfect Fungi have not been seen to do this and it is thought they have lost the ability. Basidiomycota are mushrooms and toadstools. They produce sexually via spores. Finally, zygomycota, which is bread mold, and develop by sexually and asexually.
Plants in the phylum Coniferophyta are gymnosperms.
The Phylum of an eucalyptus is Magnoliophyta
absolutely! gymnosperm - 'naked seed' trees in phylum coniferophyta phylum gnetophyta phylum ginkgophyta phylum cycadophyta
Mycetozoa
Zygomycota
A mold
Rhizopus stolonifer
Paramecium is located in the phylum ciliophora.
Domain: Eukaryota; Kingdom: Fungi; Phylum: Ascomycota; Class: Penicillium sp.
Black bread mold is also called ergot. It is of the phylum Zygomycota of the Kingdom Fungi.
Rhizopus nigricans .is SN of common black bread mold .
Kingdom: Fungi. Phylum: Ascomycota. Class: Sordariomycetes. Order: Hypocreales. Family: Dematiaceae. Genus: Stachybotrys. There are two species: S. chartarum and S. cylindrospora.
zygospore fungi from the phylum zygomycota with 600 species AKA black bread mold
Many different onesMost bread molds are found in the phylum Zygomycota. See the related link.Some common bread mould are rhizopus (a black fuzzyish fungi), penicillium (the mould which can produce penicillin), and nigrican.
The classification of fungi, the kingdom to which moulds belong, is complex and subject to change as scientists discover more about their evolutionary relationships. The term mould is a colloquial one and does not identify a particular organism, and there are many different ones. Mucor, the common pin mould, was formerly placed in the phylum zygomycota, but is now reclassified as glomeromycota, and green mould, Penicillium, is in the phylum ascomycota.