Scientists do not consider plants to be fungi. Plants are autotrophic organisms that are able to synthesize new organic compounds from inorganic carbon (usually in the form of carbon dioxide) utilizing the energy found in sunlight. This is preformed in specialized organelles called chloroplasts and uses pigments called chlorophyll. Fungi are heterotrophic, which means they are unable to turn inorganic carbon into organic carbon and must derive all of their energy by breaking down organic compounds produced by other organisms.
Plants are made out of cells with cell walls constructed of cellulose, the fiberous pieces in plants. Fungi, in contrast, have cells walls constructed of chitin. Fungi are also heterotrophs, obtaining nutrients from other living organisms. Plants are autotrophs, creating nutrients from photosynthesis. Fungi don't have leaves. Plants do. In general, fungi are fundamentally different than plants. For that reason, scientists categorize them differently.
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.
It is because Fungi are more ohemically and qunetically simillar to animal than organism.
It is because Fungi are more ohemically and qunetically simillar to animal than organism.
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.
Archaebacteria arose first, followed by protists, then animals, fungi, and plants. This evolutionary sequence is generally accepted by scientists based on evidence from the fossil record and molecular studies.
Mycologists are scientists that study fungi. They examine the characteristics, biology, ecology, and classification of fungi, contributing to our understanding of their importance in various ecosystems and their applications in biotechnology and medicine.
Scientists use the following six kingdoms to classify organisms: Animalia (animals), Plantae (plants), Fungi (fungi), Protista (protists), Archaea (archaea), and Bacteria (bacteria). This classification system helps scientists organize and study the vast diversity of life on Earth.
Fungi and plants are multicellular.
fungi & animals
Fungi are neither plants nor animals. They belong to their own separate kingdom called Fungi. While they share some similarities with plants in terms of cell structure and reproduction, they obtain nutrients through absorption like animals do.
Fish, mammels, birds, reptiles and amphibians x