Mycelia
The thread like structures found in some fungi are a kind of tubes (filaments with openings on the cell walls) that allow cytoplasm to move between the different cells of a multicelular fungus.
hyphae
The two hyphae involved in sexual reproduction in fungi are known as the (+) or male hyphae and the (-) or female hyphae. These hyphae contain opposite mating types and are involved in the fusion process to form a zygote.
mycelia
Thread like structures in fungi are called hyphae .
Hyphae, slender filaments, is what most fungi are composed of.
An above ground mass of hyphae is called a mycelium.
Multicellular fungi composed of thin filaments are called mycelium. Mycelium is made up of a network of hyphae that grow and spread to absorb nutrients from their environment.
Hyphae called stolons grow in a network over the surface of the food. The stolons give rise to another type of hyphae that grow upward from the surface of the food, that are reproductive hyphae, called sporangiophores.
Hyphae are divided into cells by internal cross-walls in most fungai. These are called septate hyphae. The cells that are not divided are called aseptate.
Mycelium or mycelia.
In the ascocarp, the two types of hyphae are the filamentous vegetative hyphae, which provide structural support and nutrient absorption, and the specialized reproductive hyphae called asci, which contain the sexual spores (ascospores). Asci are typically arranged in a specific structure within the ascocarp called the hymenium, where they release the ascospores.