the yeasts and the eukaryotes and the hosts if u have any questions contact me awesomer1@Yahoo.com oh yeah almost forgot if anybody lives in Columbia go to whatsyourvantagepoint.com go to enter site and enter in the bottom right things are not as they appear than enter the information and you win i live inpennsylvania so i cant get the prize. Its only for people who live in Columbia ok thanks :)
The cell nucleus in bread mold is responsible for storing genetic material and controlling the cell's activities. It regulates gene expression, growth, and reproduction within the mold cells. It plays a crucial role in maintaining the overall function and structure of the mold.
Yes, bread mold gets its nutrients from the bread as it breaks down and feeds on the carbohydrates within the bread. Mold spores land on the bread and grow under favorable conditions, such as warmth and moisture, eventually consuming the bread for nutrients.
Bread mold, such as Rhizopus stolonifer, is a type of multicellular fungus made up of many cells. It typically consists of elongated multicellular filaments called hyphae that collectively form the visible fuzzy structure you see on bread.
Yeast are not a natural grouping. The yeast growth form has arisen a couple times in the evolutionary history of the fungi. Any unicellular fungus that reproduces primarily by budding or fission is called a yeast.
Black bread mold, Rhizopus stolonifer, is not a sac fungi but a zygospore fungi or zygomycota. Red bread molds (neurospora) are in fact sac fungi/ascomycota. They are a form of sexual sac fungi (along with truffles). (from the Mader Biology textbook 10th edition. copyright 2010. Mc-Graw Hill companies)
the cells of bread mold is arranged by having different vitamins in them and not having any fungi
the cells of bread mold is arranged by having different vitamins in them and not having any fungi
The cells of bread mold are loosely arranged. This is the opposite of the cells of mushrooms which are packed tightly together.
The three characteristics that a bread mold shares with a mushroom are both use spores to reproduces, both have hyphae, and both have eukaryotes.
yeast, mushrooms, and bread mold are fungi. but algae isn't;algae is a plant.
No. That substance is called mold.
It is a collection of cells known as hypha.
When mold spores come into contact with a source of food, like the carbohydrates in the bread you left out, the cells metabolize the sugar and begin multiplying, forming the fuzzy mass of cells that we know as mold.
No. Bread mold grows on bread, hence the name.
fungus, mold, etc mushroom reproduces by spore
fungus, mold, etc mushroom reproduces by spore
The cell nucleus in bread mold is responsible for storing genetic material and controlling the cell's activities. It regulates gene expression, growth, and reproduction within the mold cells. It plays a crucial role in maintaining the overall function and structure of the mold.