It is possible that a mushroom has grown in your plant. Mushrooms can sometimes appear in potted plants due to the presence of spores in the soil.
A mushroom .
Most types of mushroom grown commercially are grown for consumption as food. The common brown mushroom, shitake mushroom (japanese), portabella mushroom, and some types of truffles. I'm sure there are other types of mushrooms grown for other purposes (IE: medicinal), but there are probably far less of those.
The mushroom and the green plant
mushroom = fungus; fungus does not = plant
Both GREEN PLANT EX - FERNS and mushroom REPROUDUCE SEXUALLY BY MEANS OF SPORESGREEN PLANT EX - FERNS AND MUSHROOM THEY BOTH STINKThank you
Yes
this question can be true or false because yes a mushroom is a fungus but it can be grown like a crop
If the mushroom is parasitic on the plant, yes.
No, I have not encountered a light green mushroom growing in my plant.
A mushroom may be growing in your plant because the conditions are damp and dark, which are ideal for mushroom growth. Mushrooms are fungi that thrive in moist environments and feed on decaying organic matter, such as the soil in your plant.
A mushroom grew in your plant because mushrooms are a type of fungus that can thrive in damp and dark environments, such as the soil of a potted plant. The spores of the mushroom may have been present in the soil or introduced through contaminated water or soil. The mushroom likely grew due to the favorable conditions in the plant's environment.
A mushroom :>