they are also known as bread molds and one of the examples is the Rhizopus
Phylum Ascomycota is the phylum with sac fungi. They are characterized by their sac structure, called the ascus, which has between four and eight ascospores.
well 2 chainz is a major characteristic,
Sac fungi
yeast
Deuteromycota The phylum Deuteromycota does not exist anymore. There has been a reclassification of the Kingdom Fungi. Aspergillus belongs to the phylum Ascomycota.
Vertebrates belong in the phylum Chordata.
The wallaby's phylum is chordata.
Tuna belongs to the phylum Chordata
Sharks belong to Phylum Chordata.
the phylum is ascomycota
Deuteromycota The phylum Deuteromycota does not exist anymore. There has been a reclassification of the Kingdom Fungi. Aspergillus belongs to the phylum Ascomycota.
Lichens do not belong to a specific phylum. They are a symbiotic association between a fungus and an alga or a cyanobacterium. The fungus belongs to the phylum Ascomycota, while the alga or cyanobacterium can belong to various phyla.
The Ascomycota type, which are truffles and yeasts procreate sexually. Imperfect Fungi have not been seen to do this and it is thought they have lost the ability. Basidiomycota are mushrooms and toadstools. They produce sexually via spores. Finally, zygomycota, which is bread mold, and develop by sexually and asexually.
Mushrooms were originally classifed in the phylum Basidiomycota, and the sac fungi were originally placed in the phylum Ascomycota. Recently, these two phyla have been merged to form the Dikaryomycota.
Fungi
Ascomycota includes a wide range of fungi such as morels, truffles, yeasts, and many plant pathogens like powdery mildew and Dutch elm disease. This phylum is characterized by its sexual spore-producing structures called asci and includes both edible and pathogenic species.
Penicillium belongs to the phylum Ascomycota.
Yeast belongs to the phylum Ascomycota.
Ascomycota. Here's the link to the wiki entry: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ascomycota Hope this helped.
The "true yeasts" are in phylum Ascomycota. There are some organisms commonly called "yeast" in Basidomycota as well.
Domain: Eukaryota; Kingdom: Fungi; Phylum: Ascomycota; Class: Penicillium sp.