Yes, fungi has both animal and plant characteristics.
No. The vertabrae is a section of the spine in most living animals. Since fungi are not animals, and, frankly, do not have bones or an exoskeleton, they cannot have a vertabrae.
No,
They have their own kingdom of fungi. They are somewhere between plants and animals.
invertebrate
Edited answer:
Fungus does not belong to animal kingdom
Fungi is neither vertebrate nor invertebrate. Only members of the kingdom Animalia can be invertebrates or vertebrates, and fungi is not a member of that kingdom. It belongs to the kingdom Fungi.
It is not an animal so it is not a vertebrate or invertebrate.
it is fungi it is fungi it is fungi
Baboons are omnivores, as they will eat meat as well as plants.
The axolotl is in the vertebrate classification of amphibians.
Fungi is neither vertebrate nor invertebrate. Only members of the kingdom Animalia can be invertebrates or vertebrates, and fungi is not a member of that kingdom. It belongs to the kingdom Fungi.
you would think that yeast is invertebrate because it has no backbone but actually yeast is a fungus which means that its niether
Aspergillus are a type of fungi thus they are invertebrates.An vertebrate is described as an animal with a backbone or spine.Just like mushrooms, aspergillus do not have bones let alone a spine.
Two types of living things can be generalized to prokaryotes (which are bacteria and archae) and eukaryotes (which are animals, plants, protists, and fungi).
A Beaver is a vertebrate and a mammal.
vertebrate.
It is a vertebrate. It has a spine.
The triceratops was an ancient vertebrate, and all vertebrates belong to the taxonomic domain of Eukarya.Eukarya covers all organisms in the Kingdom Animalia, as well as the Kingdoms Plantae, Fungi and Protista.
The dinosaur was an ancient vertebrate, and all vertebrates belong to the taxonomic domain of Eukarya.Eukarya covers all organisms in the Kingdom Animalia, as well as the Kingdoms Plantae, Fungi and Protista.
Vertebrate
vertebrate.
vertebrate