decomposers
Fungi are not part of the animal kingdom.
There are commonly recognized five animal kingdoms: Kingdom Animalia, Kingdom Plantae, Kingdom Fungi, Kingdom Protista, and Kingdom Monera. The animal kingdom specifically belongs to Kingdom Animalia, which includes multicellular organisms that are eukaryotic and heterotrophic.
The animal kingdom of Saturn at Taco Bell
animal kingdom, fungi kingdom, plant kingdom
No, worms are part of the animal kingdom, specifically the phylum Annelida. Fungi belong to their own kingdom called Fungi.
Fungi, animals, and plants belong to three separate kingdoms in the classification of living organisms. Fungi are grouped in the kingdom Fungi, animals in the kingdom Animalia, and plants in the kingdom Plantae. Each kingdom represents a distinct group of organisms with unique characteristics.
Fungi Fungi used to be classed as members of the Plant Kingdom but are now placed in a separate Kingdom of Life, the others being the Plant Kingdom and the Animal Kingdom.
the animals live in fungi
It is under kingdom fungi. Neither plant nor animal.
Fungi were once grouped with the kingdom plantae, whoever scientists decided that Fungi were too fundamentally different from plants because they lacked chloroplast and chlorophyll, they had no stems or roots, and Fungi are decomposers not producers. so scientists gave Fungi their own kingdom.
fungi, bacteria
Yes, fungi has both animal and plant characteristics.