Well, to understand that, first you have to understand the forest floor. In this case I'm referring to a rainforest. The forest floor only gets 2% sunlight out of all that good stuff up top, so naturally only certain plants can grow here. The plants usually only grow around river banks and swampy areas. Because of this, there is a lot of plant (and animal) decay. So this is where your fungus comes in. It actually helps to decay the plants and animals, and it also helps to clean them up, by "eating" them. Hope this helps!
Bracket fungi grows on trees because it feeds off wood. It can kill trees, even.
for food
Bracket Fungi are attached with trees like a bracket .
bracket fungi eatscandy, therefore itlookslike candy. The bindweed does not eat candy.
For some fungi, such as Pilobulos, Ascobolus, and many that grow on trees, yes. For others, no. The light requirements of fungi are species specific.
bracket funguspuffballs
fungi and bacteria grow from spores.
yes you can mostly bracket fungi on tropical rain forest trees.
Bracket Fungi are attached with trees like a bracket .
Lichens, mosses and fungi grow on the trunk of trees.
ANSWER: It is a fungus that grow on trees,ppeferably dead ones. See the related link for more information.
Moss and fungi.
Bracket fungi reproduce by spores, like any other fungi.
The scientific name is Bracket fungi. The B in Bracket is capitalized, because that is the genus name, and the f in fungi is lowercase because that is the species. Therefore, the scientific name is Bracket fungi.
No..a tree is another specie of plant. altough fungi can grow on trees No. Fungi are their own kingdom. The Fungus kingdom.
They are competitors. Fungi and moss can form symbiotic relationships with trees. That is why you can find mushrooms at the bases of Oak Trees.
Fungi are organisms that grow on areas like lawns, trees, even mold. They are well-known as one of the six kingdoms.
bracket fungi eatscandy, therefore itlookslike candy. The bindweed does not eat candy.
Ramalina fraxinea , is a lichen that belongs to the 'sac' fungi. They always grow upside down in the united kingdom on trees