No. Members of the taxonomical kingdom Fungi are not considered "flowering" since they reproduce asexually or sexually through the production of spores, not seeds. Also, they are no longer considered "plants" since they have little in common with the members of the kindom Plantae and in some cases are more closely related to bacteria (kingdom Monera).
The fungus reproduce by microscopic spores. These spores can be spread in the air and soil, where they can be inhaled or come in contact to surfaces.
The gills of mushrooms contain spores, which are the reproductive cells of the fungus. These spores are released into the air to help the fungus reproduce and spread.
It reproduce by releasing themselves when the wind blows
Cordyceps reproduce by producing spores that are released into the environment. These spores then land on a suitable host, such as an insect or arthropod, and infect it. The fungus grows inside the host, eventually killing it, and then produces more spores to continue its life cycle.
The "toadstool"is not an actual fungus. When talking about toadstools, we are actually refering to Amanita Muscaria, or the red mushroom with white spots. Amanita Muscaria is a fungus, so yes, it does release spores.
Bracket fungi reproduce by spores, like any other fungi.
The fungus reproduce by microscopic spores. These spores can be spread in the air and soil, where they can be inhaled or come in contact to surfaces.
The gills of mushrooms contain spores, which are the reproductive cells of the fungus. These spores are released into the air to help the fungus reproduce and spread.
It reproduce by releasing themselves when the wind blows
A mushroom cap is filled with thousands of tiny spores. These spores are dispersed into the air to reproduce and spread the fungus.
The spores of the fungi spread over long distances and germinate where food is already available.
Cordyceps reproduce by producing spores that are released into the environment. These spores then land on a suitable host, such as an insect or arthropod, and infect it. The fungus grows inside the host, eventually killing it, and then produces more spores to continue its life cycle.
Most fungi, if not, all are. They reproduce by basically bursting spores, which are kinda like seeds.
A puffball is a type of fungus belonging to the phylum Basidiomycota, not a zygote fungus. Puffballs reproduce by releasing spores from their fruiting bodies, which are structures formed by the fungus for spore dispersal.
Fungus-like protists move, that is the biggest difference. Both of them are heterotrophs, eukaryotic, and both use spores to reproduce.
I'm 80% sure the produce their own spores. So I think it is Asexual
The "toadstool"is not an actual fungus. When talking about toadstools, we are actually refering to Amanita Muscaria, or the red mushroom with white spots. Amanita Muscaria is a fungus, so yes, it does release spores.