There are two main parts of a mushroom's body distinguished in everyday language.
In the grocery store or cooking, the nontechnical terms are stem and, at the top, a cap or button.
Technically, most common mushrooms have a stem (stipe), a cap (pileus), and gills (lamellae).
The body of almost all fungi is a mycelium which is an interwoven mass of one cell thick, threadlike filaments called hypae.
I don't know give me the answer
Cells
Short Answer:The fruiting body or fruit body in fungi is called the sporocarp.Details:When most people see a sporocarp they call this a mushroom, but this fleshy fruiting body is only the visible part of the living organism that is popular for eating. The fruiting body only develops as part of the asexual phase of the fungal life cycle for spore production. To get more specific about the body parts of a mushroom, the fruiting body of the most common mushrooms have a stem (stipe), a cap (pileus), and gills (lamellae).Indeed, since we are getting technical about it, there are two kinds of sporocarp that most people recognize.The typical toadstool mushroom is a basidiomycete and the sporocarp is a basidiocarp or basidiome.Both the popular morel mushroom and the truffle are of the type known as an ascomycete and the fruiting body is an ascocarp.
They spend most of their life as a haploid cell.
Mushrooms are grown in almost every country. There is no data on the exact country of origin and the fungus can be found in all but the coldest climates. If you are wondering about one specific type of mushroom, you need to ask that in the question so we can answer it.
For all plato users-- (A. Fruiting Body)
Legs and hands are example of the two parts of the body.
Short Answer:The fruiting body or fruit body in fungi is called the sporocarp.Details:When most people see a sporocarp they call this a mushroom, but this fleshy fruiting body is only the visible part of the living organism that is popular for eating. The fruiting body only develops as part of the asexual phase of the fungal life cycle for spore production. To get more specific about the body parts of a mushroom, the fruiting body of the most common mushrooms have a stem (stipe), a cap (pileus), and gills (lamellae).Indeed, since we are getting technical about it, there are two kinds of sporocarp that most people recognize.The typical toadstool mushroom is a basidiomycete and the sporocarp is a basidiocarp or basidiome.Both the popular morel mushroom and the truffle are of the type known as an ascomycete and the fruiting body is an ascocarp.
They spend most of their life as a haploid cell.
Mushrooms are grown in almost every country. There is no data on the exact country of origin and the fungus can be found in all but the coldest climates. If you are wondering about one specific type of mushroom, you need to ask that in the question so we can answer it.
For all plato users-- (A. Fruiting Body)
The two-word anagrams include "drifting buoy" and "fruiting body."
They have two body parts.
yes,they have two main body parts
There is no two parts. It is one body.
Morel mushrooms are known to grow at higher elevations at the base of pine trees. The mushrooms are the fruiting body of an underground fungal organism. The fungus lives symbiotically with the tree. Morels proliferate two to three years after forest fires.
transverse
a cheetah has 3 body parts
not really