Mutualism best fits the know traits of fungi and plants. The fungi provides soil nutrients to the plant and the plant provides food to the fungi.
playful,cuddly
Mushrooms belong to the kingdom known as "Fungi". Fungi have characteristic traits such as reproducing via spores. They are also known to prefer to grow in humid climates.
Mushrooms belong to the kingdom known as "Fungi". Fungi have characteristic traits such as reproducing via spores. They are also known to prefer to grow in humid climates.
Heterotrophic, chitin in cell walls
They are of their own kingdom; Fungi.They generally are decomposers, not photosynthesizers.Some "fungi" are difficult to classify and have been classified as fungi because they have more similarities with fungi than actual plants or other life-forms.It is a life-form that is widely researched and some specimens tickle many a scientist brain as to where they actually belong.This middle paragraph seems to confuse Fungi with Protista. " Scientists brains are not tickled " as to where Fungi belong as they are all Eumycota. The only dispute over classification is within the group Fungi as molecular genetics has challenged some taxonomy that classified Fungi physically. Fungi are not plants, animals or protists.
Fungi can be further classified based on a number of characteristics. These include the size and shape of spores or fruiting structures, biochemical and physiological traits, and reproductive structures.
Fungi and algae have very few morphological characters (traits) that vary enough to distinguish between species. Additionally, most of the morphology of fungi and algae is extremely plastic. In other words, they look different in different environments.
Fungi
it is fungi it is fungi it is fungi
No, fungi is not unicellular. Fungi is multicellular
fungi belongs to the Kingdom Fungi