Want this question answered?
Plants and fungi are very different organisms in the world. These two organisms do however share the fact that they always have a cell wall.
Decomposers are the recyclers of the natural world. Some decomposers are fungi, earthworms, and bacteria. The characteristic that all decomposers share is that they take dead matter, consume it, and break it down into a form which is once more beneficial.
Yes, DNA is a characteristic that all living things share. To be more precise, all living things share a form of genetic material, which is DNA.
multicellular invertebrates
plant and fungi
Plants and fungi are very different organisms in the world. These two organisms do however share the fact that they always have a cell wall.
-Cell walls
Fungi are... Fungi. The four kingdoms of the Eukarya domain are: Protists, Plantae, Animalia, and Fungi. It is strange that people would even consider the fact that Fungi and Plants are in the same kingdom. For instance: Plants are photosynthesizers; they make their food off of the sunlight provided by the sun. Fungi are decomposers; they feed off of decaying plant and animal life they find. A plant's cell structure is also almost completely different than a fungus's. In addition, Plants start life in seed form, Fungi do not. When you add up all of the facts, the only characteristic of these two Eukaryotes that even suggests that they share the same kingdom is that they are both stationary. Nothing else.
Plants and fungi are very different organisms in the world. These two organisms do however share the fact that they always have a cell wall.
Fungi are more closely related to animals than plants. They do share some similarity to plants, though. For example, plants and fungi are both able to synthesize the amino acid lysine (animals are not); however, fungi use the AAA pathway, and plants use the DAP pathway. Plants and fungi have cells walls. Plant cell walls are made of cellulose, while fungal cell walls are made of chitin.
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.
heterptroph and prokaryote Edited answer: Produce their own food Provide oxygen and food to other organisms
Fungi were first classified as plants. However they differ in that they are heterotrophs while plants are photoautotrophs. Some characterizes that plants and fungi share are: multicellular and eukaryotic organisms, have cell wall, produce spores and are non-motile.
Because they all share eukaryotic cells.
The flag of Taiwan does not share a geometric characteristic.
Eukarya is the domain that contains plants, animals, and fungi, It also contains protists. Though there is vast diversity in form, they share fundamental characteristics of cellular organization, biochemistry, and molecular biology.
Some scientists classify fungi as plants because they share certain characteristics like cell walls and non-motility. Other scientists classify fungi as animals due to their heterotrophic nature, similar to animals, and their ability to store energy as glycogen, like animals do. Ultimately, fungi are placed in their own kingdom, separate from plants and animals, due to their unique characteristics.