Fungi are neither plants or animals, they are fungi. Once again, fungi are neither invertebrates or vertebrates, they are fungi.
I have no idea
neither
Fungi is neither vertebrate nor invertebrate. Only members of the kingdom Animalia can be invertebrates or vertebrates, and fungi is not a member of that kingdom. It belongs to the kingdom Fungi.
you would think that yeast is invertebrate because it has no backbone but actually yeast is a fungus which means that its niether
There are invertebrate flies, mites, collembolans, polychaetes, & nematodes that rely on fungus as a food source.
Imperfect fungi
Two types of living things can be generalized to prokaryotes (which are bacteria and archae) and eukaryotes (which are animals, plants, protists, and fungi).
Aspergillus are a type of fungi thus they are invertebrates.An vertebrate is described as an animal with a backbone or spine.Just like mushrooms, aspergillus do not have bones let alone a spine.
invertebrate - has exoskeleton
An invertebrate.
Actually it has more similarities to horseshoe crabs, ticks and mites, but it is not an ancestor of these creatures either. It is most likely a cousin of the ancestor of these creatures. http://www.austmus.gov.au/palaeontology/research/trilobites02.htm
A saprotroph is a ground-dwelling invertebrate that eats decaying organic matter. Fungi and some soil-dwelling bacteria are examples of saprotrophs.
It is an invertebrate 
no