Mushrooms are Fungi.
Plants produce leaves, and a mushroom is not a plant. Leaves help plants with photosynthesis- the plant's way of making food. Fungi- the group of organisms the mushroom is in- feed off of dead organisms. They have no use for photosynthesis, thus, no use for leaves.
A mushroom isn't in any food group, but if it had a food group it would be fungus.
A mushroom belongs to the fungi kingdom. Fungi are neither plants nor animals, and they obtain nutrients by decomposing organic matter in their environment.
If the mushroom is parasitic on the plant, yes.
Mushrooms are fungi, belonging to the kingdom Fungi. They are not plants or animals, but a separate group of organisms that obtain nutrients by decomposing organic matter in their environment.
A mushroom is a fungus. There is no measurement of how much of a classification of plants is in a plant. So, a mushroom is 100% fungus.
No, a mushroom is not an omnivore. An omnivore is an animal that eats everything, both flesh and plants.
no, mushroom cells don't have chloroplast because mushrooms are fungi and not plants.
Mushroom
mushroom is a saprophyte
Neither. They are fungi.
no they are fungal plants