First, the greatest website on fungi known to humankind is: http://botit.botany.wisc.edu/toms_fungi/ If you are looking for the giant puffball, in particular, you can go directly here: http://botit.botany.wisc.edu/toms_fungi/aug98.html But I will answer your most immediate question here, and immediately. Here: They most certainly grow on land, not in the water. They can grow to a diameter of more than a meter (slightly frightening to those of us with bad Allergies), and can be edible. But don't mistake them for the scleroderma. You don't want to eat that--and you don't want to get it, either. For more information, I will never beat the abovenoted Tom Volk.
Neither, Jupiter is acctually just a giant ice ball.
Mangrooves
Earth is a giant ball of rock with various elevations, those being low covered in water. Continents (in addition to islands) are the only exposed land of Earth.
Was in water. And is now on land. Ex: a frog. A tadpole live in the water first. Then it grows and lives on land.
no they do not. they can only breath in water.
Yes, begonia grows in soil, not in water.
You can have A Giant African Land Snail like I have!
Are you stupid!? Jupiter is a frikin giant ball of compresed gas so it has no landscape idiot.
moss grows on land, and algae grows in water
Iowa is "the land where the tall corn grows"
Giant snakeheads can't live on land because they are fish and fish, as you know, have gills to breath under water...
life is not all aquatic some lives are terrestrial and others are aquatic terrestrial- lives or grows on land aquatic- lives or grows in water