No, your stomach acid will kill that sort of thing.
no fungi does not need sunlght if you are talking about mushrooms or moss or kelp. you should have learned that in school. sincerly,bradley
Some people believe that the largest living organism is a honey fungus growing in the US - so the answer is very big! This fungus is not a huge mushroom but instead it is the bits that grow underground (known as hyphae) that are big because they can spread out over large areas.
Native plants grow naturally in a place.
Yes they do in the late spring usually. Just be sure you know what your eating before you eat them because then could cause death or serious illness. They sprout out of the top of cow manure.
Mushrooms are grown in moist areas with constant soil temperature. Mushrooms do NOT grow in cow dung.
Seaweeds grow in oceans and seas and it is considered an alga. Mushrooms grow on land and are the fruiting body of a fungus. Mushrooms also grow on things.
If improperly stored, fungus can grow in magics mushrooms (mushrooms themselves are a speciece(sp?) of fungus). However, magic mushrooms themselves do not cause any diseases, any other than getting a food infection from fungi that can grow on improperly stored magic mushrooms (which can also happen to normal mushrooms or any other type of fresh food).
No, fungus does not have roots. It can grow on the roots of other planets. See "Mycorrhizea".
First of all, you should not need to know how many spores are needed to grow "magic mushrooms" but it would be the same as for regular mushrooms. As mushrooms are a fungus, they can grow from only one spore..
A mushroom is neither a fruit nor a vegetable; technically mushrooms aren't even plants. They are a special type of fungus.
There is a fungus in the Amazon rain forest that infects ants and kills them. Its mushrooms grow from the carcass of the victim.
In this case, bacteria can grow more and divide into more organisms, but fungus, however, can grow into mushrooms that are bigger than organisms. so in opinion, it is fungus.
Fungus like Mushrooms sprout out of the ground and need water to grow and you can eat some kinds of Mushroom but it is a Fungus not a Plant
Mushrooms, though technically they are a fungus and not a plant.
Yes, mushrooms can technically grow without sunlight. They obtain all of their nutrients from the soil but they tend to use ambient light to produce vitamin D.
Sort of. Mushrooms need a bit of moisture, and thunder is often followed by rain. So it's not really the thunder & lightning that brings the mushrooms out, but the accompanying rain that does it.Only rain would work just as well, but not be quite as noticeable.Lightning and thunder cannot cause mushrooms to grow, but they are usually accompanied by rain, and fungi (a mushroom is part of a fungus) grow best in moist environments.
no fungi does not need sunlght if you are talking about mushrooms or moss or kelp. you should have learned that in school. sincerly,bradley