no they dont... animals have muscles
I know for a fact it means "the study of fungi", like mushrooms and what not. but at the same time, resources online seem to point that it's a branch of physiology dealing with muscles and their structure, not function...
Fungi do not have muscles like animals do, so they do not "move" in the same way. However, some fungi can grow and spread by expanding their network of hyphae (filamentous structures) through the substrate they are growing on. Other fungi, like mushrooms, release spores that can be carried by wind or animals to new locations for growth.
No, fungi is not unicellular. Fungi is multicellular
fungi belongs to the Kingdom Fungi
evolved fungi
respond pls
Fungi are neither plants or animals, they are fungi. Once again, fungi are neither invertebrates or vertebrates, they are fungi.
Fungi belong to the Kingdom Fungi.
Fungi are plants. Fungi produce their own food through photosynthesis. Fungi are important decomposers in ecosystems. Fungi reproduce through spores.
Yeast and truffles are part of the sac fungi. Also included in the sac fungi are penicillium and morels.
no, it is a fungi
Fungi.