Kingdom Fungi is Multi cellular and Kingdom Plantae is Unicellular ~Amberr<3 (your_using_the_7thGrade_interactive_reader ) you just got caught
Fungi are classified in its own kingdom, not under plantae.
The kingdom Fungi was separated from the kingdom Plantae because fungi lack the ability to photosynthesize. Instead, they obtain their nutrients through external digestion and absorption. This key difference in nutritional mode led to the establishment of a separate kingdom for fungi.
Members of the kingdom Fungi are Heterotrophs and the Members of the kingdom Plantae are Photosynthetic Autotrophs.
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it belongs to the fungi kingdom
Plantae
the animals live in fungi
There are commonly recognized five animal kingdoms: Kingdom Animalia, Kingdom Plantae, Kingdom Fungi, Kingdom Protista, and Kingdom Monera. The animal kingdom specifically belongs to Kingdom Animalia, which includes multicellular organisms that are eukaryotic and heterotrophic.
All fungi belong to the taxonomic domain of Eukarya, members of which are characterised by having cells with nuclei. Eukarya covers all organisms in the Kingdom Animalia, as well as the Kingdoms Plantae, Fungi and Protista.
There are 7 levels. Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species. A way to remember this is King Philip Came Over For Green Spaghetti.
Fungi does not belong to a family, it is a Kingdom which is a more inclusive classification than family
Monera, Protists, Fungi, Plants, Animals That answer is for higher grades. for example 5th grade........ it would be bacteria, protists, fungi, plants, animals. wat is monera?????????????????????????? Do they not mean like united kingdom! : )