There are many estimates, but the best known one is 1.5 million species.
No, they are a type of fungi - which is a kingdom in it's own right, encompassing mould, yeast and fungi. Bacteria are prokaryotic - contain only one cell and lack nuclei. Fungi are eukaryotic (multi-celled), and much bigger.
Fungi are larger than viruses. Fungi are complex multicellular organisms, while viruses are much smaller and can only replicate inside the cells of living organisms.
Fungi are plants. Fungi produce their own food through photosynthesis. Fungi are important decomposers in ecosystems. Fungi reproduce through spores.
Viruses are the smallest of the three main types of microbes, which also include bacteria and fungi. Viruses are much smaller than bacteria and fungi and are considered acellular, as they cannot survive or replicate without a host cell.
Fungi can exhibit both asymmetrical and symmetrical growth patterns. Some fungi, like yeast, may be considered asymmetrical due to their simple, single-celled structure. However, other fungi, including molds and mushrooms, display more complex and symmetrical growth forms.
No, they are a type of fungi - which is a kingdom in it's own right, encompassing mould, yeast and fungi. Bacteria are prokaryotic - contain only one cell and lack nuclei. Fungi are eukaryotic (multi-celled), and much bigger.
Fungi are larger than viruses. Fungi are complex multicellular organisms, while viruses are much smaller and can only replicate inside the cells of living organisms.
Not much. Fungi really only needs a dark wet place and Carbon Dioxide :p
penicillin
No. Molds are fungi. Viruses are not fungi. Fungi can get viruses, just like you or I, but there are no viruses that are fungi. There are no fungi that are viruses. This does not address whether you can get fungal meningitis from black mold, but you absolutely definitively cannot get viral meningitis from black mold. Additionally, having fungal meningitis might make you more or less susceptible to getting viral meningitis, but you probably won't be too concerned with viral meningitis if you're busy fighting fungal meningitis. You won't be concerned with much else at all.
Fungi get into food through contamination - the fungi is allowed to contact the food in some fashion. In the United States, most cross-contamination like this happens in the home after the food has been open. Fungi are pretty much everywhere and for the most part don't hurt anything.
No, fungi is not unicellular. Fungi is multicellular
fungi belongs to the Kingdom Fungi
evolved fungi
Yes, there are fungi that live in deserts as lichens. Lichens can also be found at the poles (which are also dry since cold air does not hold much moisture and there is not much liquid water in the soil).
respond pls
A mushroom is a fungus. There is no measurement of how much of a classification of plants is in a plant. So, a mushroom is 100% fungus.