saprophytes
The scientific name of penicillin is Penicillium and it belongs to the phylum Ascomycota.
The answer is Phylum Ctenophora.
Penicillium (from Latin penicillus: paintbrush) is a genus of ascomycetous fungi. The fungi produces penicillin which is a molecule used as an antibiotic.Penicillium was discovered in 1928 by Alexander Fleming's lab assistant when he left a window open overnight and had mold spores over his bacterial specimens in a petri dish. He nearly threw it away but when he examined it under a microscope he discovered that many bacteria in the petri dish were dying due to the fungi growing around them.
The scientific name for the phyla that contains jellyfish is Cnidaria. This phylum includes animals such as jellyfish, corals, and sea anemones, which all possess stinging cells called cnidocytes that they use for capturing prey and defending themselves.
Some examples of fungi with scientific names include: Agaricus bisporus (button mushroom) Penicillium chrysogenum (used to produce penicillin) Aspergillus niger (common mold) Saccharomyces cerevisiae (baker's yeast)
The plural form of phylum is phyla.
The answer is Phylum Ctenophora.
Genus and species.
The scientific name for the phyla that contains jellyfish is Cnidaria. This phylum includes animals such as jellyfish, corals, and sea anemones, which all possess stinging cells called cnidocytes that they use for capturing prey and defending themselves.
The scientific or taxonomic name would be Phyla cuneifolia.
It belongs to the "Penicillins" antibiotic category. The Pen Vee (penicillin) is also a name of an antibiotic - but it is also the name of the class.
Penicillin comes from the penicillium mold.
Spores from Penicillium glaucum are used to make gorgonzola cheese which belongs to the Ascomycota phylum.
Penicillium (from Latin penicillus: paintbrush) is a genus of ascomycetous fungi. The fungi produces penicillin which is a molecule used as an antibiotic.Penicillium was discovered in 1928 by Alexander Fleming's lab assistant when he left a window open overnight and had mold spores over his bacterial specimens in a petri dish. He nearly threw it away but when he examined it under a microscope he discovered that many bacteria in the petri dish were dying due to the fungi growing around them.
The discovery of penicillin
it got its name from agent penicillin
Some examples of fungi with scientific names include: Agaricus bisporus (button mushroom) Penicillium chrysogenum (used to produce penicillin) Aspergillus niger (common mold) Saccharomyces cerevisiae (baker's yeast)
penicillin amidohydrolase