No it is a type of fungus!!
neither. algae, bacteria and fungi are all separate groups of classification
algae and fungi are different organisms algae cannot turn into fungi.
no mucor i sin a way a type of mild belonging to the fungi group
no fungi grows on you and alge grows in the water Actually, I disagree with the above answer, so I'm improving. They do have similarities. Both fungi and algae prefer to live in moist environments. Both can range in size from a single-celled organism to much larger, multi-celled organisms. Both have haploid nuclei (only one chromosome instead of two).
I'm just 13 and my theory is fungi because you can see algae more clearly than fungi
I believe that it is a type of fungi.
No, Algae is a completely different thing than Fungi
A. B. Cribb has written: 'Three species of fungi parasitic on marine algae in Tasmania' -- subject(s): Algae, Pathogenic fungi 'An ecological and taxonomic account of the algae of a semi-marine cavern, Paradise Cave, Queensland' 'Marine algae of the southern Great Barrier Reef' -- subject(s): Classification, Marine algae 'Some marine algae from Thursday Island and surrounding areas'
NO! plantae or protista it depends on the type of algae
neither. algae, bacteria and fungi are all separate groups of classification
its a type of fungi
It is called a lichen.
Bacteria, fungi, algae, protozoa and virus
Algae is autotrophic while fungi is not. Therefore fungi does not make food by itself as does algae.
Lichenaria is an organism formed from the fusion of algae and fungi.
Mold is a part of the kingdom fungi. The kingdom archaebacteria has bacteria and algae, but does not contain any fungi.
algae and fungi are different organisms algae cannot turn into fungi.