No. Fungi are their own kingdom of organisms separate from plants and animals. Insects are animals.
Growing on or in an insect body, as certain fungi
Growing on or in an insect body, as certain fungi
They are both alive.
No. The tick is in the insect family. The fungi family consists only of fungus, like mushrooms. Not animals.
bacteria and fungi. worms and insect larva will eat some of it.
Chitin.
they do not turn into moths nor butterflies but an insect known as the fungi nat
Yes there are insects that eat fungi, but fungi can eat some insects as well. Follow this link and you see that ants can get eaten alive by fungi. http://www.tightloop.com/ants/whatEatsAnts.htm
There are no known human parasites that do this, but there are several insect parasites that do something like this including both nematodes and fungi.
Decomposers (fungi, bacteria, insect larva) are organisms that live off dead material left behind by ealier organisms. They are important because they reduce organic material to a simpler form usable by other life.
Kiwi eat some plant parts, but generally not the leaves of plants. They eat seeds and small fruits. This is in addition to their main diet of earthworms, fungi, insect larvae and other invertebrates, as well as eels, freshwater crayfish and small lizards.
A small often microscopic animal or insect is often referred to as a microorganism or a microbe. These terms encompass a wide range of tiny organisms including bacteria, viruses, fungi, and protozoa.