maybe the kinds that use sporangia? maybe threadlike? becuase i know that threadlike uses sporangia.
Fungi Under stressful conditions, many fungi will rely on sexual reproduction. When conditions improve, they resume asexual reproduction. Others rely primarily on one mode or the other. Club fungi, for example - mushrooms
Short Answer:Asexual animals are rare, but they exist. Most, but not all have a sexual reproduction phase.The exceptions are discussed below and in related links.Longer Answer:The term for asexual reproduction is parthenogenesis. Asexual reproduction in plants, fungi, molds and bacteria is commonplace. This answer deals animals and includes fish and insects and reptiles.A number of species can produce both sexually and asexually. This has been observed in some species of aphids, Daphnia, rotifers, nematodes. Some invertebrates, and . Apparently other Among vertebrates, certain lizards have this ability including Komodo dragons. Asexual reproduction is documented in two shark species, hammerhead- and blacktop.If one considers cloning a form of asexual reproduction, i.e. making identical copies of an original that was the result of combining male and female genetic materials, then a number of higher animals do this in the womb with the 9-banded armadillos being the most studied example. (Twins in humans and other animals are considered an accident version of this and not true asexual reproduction, but that is a matter of opinion.) Several insects (Hymenoptera) have this ability.The rarest form of animal asexual reproduction is obligate parthenogenesis where the species propagates with only an asexual mechanism.There are over 80 species reptiles, amphibians and fishes which no longer involve males in the reproductive process. Bdelloid rotifers have evolved in this manner as well as two species of stick insects.
An amoeba
Spores are produced during sporogenesis, which is found specifically in plants, algae and fungi. No animals currently produce spores as a method of reproduction.
Carnivorous fungi or predaceous fungi are fungi that derive some or most of their nutrients from trapping and digesting microscopic or other minute animals.They generally belong to the phyla Ascomycota, Mucoromycotina, and Basidiomycota. They usually live in soil and many species trap or stun nematodes (nematophagous fungus), while others attack amoebae or collembola.Two basic trapping mechanisms have been observed in carnivorous fungi that are predatory on nematodes:constricting rings (active traps)adhesive structures (passive traps)
For Plato it is Deuteromycota =)
the answer for Plato web learners is (D. deuteromycota)
Yes, the sexual stage has been observed in imperfect fungi, which are also known as Deuteromycetes or fungi lacking a known sexual stage. Although they were originally thought to reproduce solely through asexual means, it has been discovered that some species of imperfect fungi can undergo sexual reproduction under certain conditions. However, the sexual stage in these fungi is rare and not well understood compared to fungi with known sexual cycles.
There has never been a sexual reproductive stage observed in the members of this Phylum.
zygote forming fungi
spores
Imperfect fungi are considered imperfect because they do not exhibit in any of its life cycle both means of reproduction - sexual and asexual reproduction. Their most common means of reproduction is by asexual reproduction.AnswerThey were called imperfect because no one understood their life styles "perfectly". Also there is current debate over how to classify these fungi. The imperfect fungi were once grouped in the phylum Deuteromycota, however this phylum has been removed and there is currently no place for these asexual fungi in the current fungal classification system. It is because there has never been a sexual reproductive stage observed from them. B.
they lack sexual reproduction.
it isnt true