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Sexual reproduction in fungi usually involves two different mating types. Because gametes of both mating types are about the same size, they are not called male and female. Rather, one mating type is called "+" (plus) and the other "−" (minus). When hyphae of opposite mating types meet, they start the process of sexual reproduction by fusing, bringing plus and minus nuclei together in the same cell. After a period of growth and development, these nuclei form a diploid zygote nucleus. In most fungi, the diploid zygote then enters meiosis, completing the sexual phase of its life cycle by producing haploid spores. Like the spores produced asexually, these spores are also capable of growing, by repeated rounds of mitosis, into new organisms.

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15y ago
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12y ago

No, Zygote-forming fungi produce asexually.

Two separate hyphae, a "negative" and a "positive" one, fuse together to form something called the zygospore. The zygospore goes through a bunch of germination steps (Meiosis, etc...), and eventually grows to become another mature fungus.

Note: The Hyphae are the filaments that make up the body of the fungi

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14y ago

In sexual reproduction the hyphae of two fungi grow together and genetic material is exchanged

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12y ago

A for plato users

zygospore

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Q: Where does sexual reproduction occur in Zygomycota?
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