yes but it depends on which type of fungi. Usually, fungi like mushrooms are soft, but some others aren't.
Their composition of soft materials.
Mushrooms are very soft and have no cellulose or rigid fibers in them. They smash and disintegrate before they are fossilized.
decomposers like worms and fungi eat it
Mushrooms are members of the Fungi Kingdom
A. S. Zainal has written: 'Micro-morphological studies of soft rot fungi in wood' -- subject(s): Chaetomium globosum, Deterioration, Phialophora fastigiata, Wood, Wood-decaying fungi
No, fungi is not unicellular. Fungi is multicellular
When a plant/animal dies, the soft parts of the body swiftly become decayed, and decompose via organisms called decomposers. If they are near trees or other plants or fungi, they might become become absorbed for nutrients through the soil.
fungi belongs to the Kingdom Fungi
evolved fungi
respond pls
Fungi are neither plants or animals, they are fungi. Once again, fungi are neither invertebrates or vertebrates, they are fungi.
Fungi belong to the Kingdom Fungi.