Neither. They are fungi.
Fungi. Closer to animals than to plants actually.
they are known as heterotrops the cant make food themselves they depend on other plants and animals example fungi,like mushroom
it decomposes dead animals or plants
A mushroom belongs to the fungi kingdom. Fungi are neither plants nor animals, and they obtain nutrients by decomposing organic matter in their environment.
Mushrooms are fungi, belonging to the kingdom Fungi. They are not plants or animals, but a separate group of organisms that obtain nutrients by decomposing organic matter in their environment.
If the mushroom is parasitic on the plant, yes.
A mushroom is a fungus. There is no measurement of how much of a classification of plants is in a plant. So, a mushroom is 100% fungus.
Only plants are producers (ie they make thier food from air,water and sunlight), animals can not do this and they have to eat plants for food. Thefore without plants there would be no animals.
The mushroom is a fungus, and all fungi belong to the taxonomic domain of Eukarya.Eukarya covers all organisms in the Kingdom Fungi, as well as the Kingdoms Plantae, Animalia and Protista.
No, a mushroom is not an omnivore. An omnivore is an animal that eats everything, both flesh and plants.
no, mushroom cells don't have chloroplast because mushrooms are fungi and not plants.
Mushrooms are Fungi.