they are produced in gills
under the cap of the mushroom.
they are produced in gills
large surface area.
Usually in the gills in the case of most mushrooms, but occasionally in 'pores' that open up in the case of polypore and other mushroom varieties. In p. cubensis or magic mushroom species they are produced in the gills which drops the spores after a 'veil' is torn open to expose the underside of the gills.
If you are talking about mushroom spores, then Fungi If you are talking about mushroom spores, then Fungi
Yes, the spores are, but the mushroom that is grown from it is Not.
The spores are produced inside the cap on the surfaces of the structures called the gills as the mushroom grows. When the mushroom fully matures, the canopy opens and a little piece of the mushroom underneath the cap called the veil tears. This exposes the gills that by then are fully covered with spores, which can now fall out and propagate more mushrooms.The way people collect the spores are they take the cap off right when the veil breaks and press the cap against aluminum foil or plastic wrap to allow the spores to collect into a "spore print."
to maximize the area where the spores are produced and also to help hold the cap of the mushrooms.
ANSWER:Mushrooms don't have seeds, they have spores. You can get mushroom spores by tapping a mature mushroom and collecting the spores to transfer to another growth medium. They are very minute and hard to see.
Spores are usually haploid and unicellular and are produced by meiosis, they are not seeds and do not contain the "bulky" multicellular embryo and seed coat that encloses it of plant seeds.
The form under the top of the mushroom.
The gills of a mushroom house the basidia, the cells on which the spores are produced. The gills function as a large surface area over which to produce millions of spores that is exposed air yet protected from large fluctuations in air temperature, moisture, etc.
Spores.
i no no