How are fungi fundamentally different from other living organisms? How do gymnosperms vary from other seed-forming plants? (a) What makes protists, animals, fungi, plants, and viruses different? (b) What makes them alike? How are the bryophytes similar to and different from the ...
Today our world is visually dominated by animals and plants, but this world would not have been possible without fungi, say University of Leeds scientists. Researchers have carried out experiments where plants and fungi are grown in atmospheres resembling the ancient Earth and, by incorporating their...
How are the circulatory systems in animals and plants alike? How do heterotrophs obtain energy? How is cell differentiation different in plants and animals? How do plants get oxygen for cellular respiration? What are the energy transfer mechanisms in plants? How do plants, fungi, an...
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New research from Michigan State University, and published in the journaleLife, presents evidence that algae could have piggybacked on fungi to leave the water and to colonize the land, over 500 million years ago. "Fungi are found all over the planet. They create symbiotic relationships with mos...
Fungi are their own, separate kingdom and while they are not plants, they are more similar to plants than animals. Different kinds of fungi exist in many different habitats, but most are found on land. Unlike dermatophytes, some fungi are beneficial; they are even used in medicine (...
Fungi are neither plants nor animals, but rather living organisms that have nuclei with chromosomes, similar to animal cells. Fungi don’t have chloroplasts like plants for photosynthesis, so they need to rely on external compounds for food, and this is where they prove to be useful. ...
Fungi have an impressive alchemical repertoire capable of creating a diverse array of chemicals for decomposition and defense. We are just beginning to get a sense of their chemical accomplishments, and while some of their compounds can be life-changing in a variety of ways, some can also cause...
Animalia (the animals) Fungi (for instance, toadstools and mushrooms) Monera (bacteria and blue-green algae) Protista (for instance, microscopic organisms called protozoa) Within each kingdom, the scientists have established six basic hierarchical groupings: ...
Many fungi damage or even kill plants. But there are also plant-friendly fungi: Most land plants live in close community with arbuscular mycorrhiza fungi (AM fungi) that stimulate their growth. Researchers of the "Molecular Phytopathology" Group of Karls