(a) What is fungi?
(b) What is the mode of nutrition in fungi?
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a ) Fungi are a group of living organisms which are classified in their own kingdom. This means they are not animals, plants, or bacteria. Unlike bacteria, which have simple prokaryotic cells, fungi have complex eukaryotic cells like animals and plants.
b ) The mode of nutrition is fungi heterotrophic. They cannot synthesize their own food and are dependent on other 'organisms' for their carbon source. They perform extracellular digestion by releasing enzymes into their environment and obtain organic and inorganic nutrients through absorption.
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Fungi (singular: fungus) are a kingdom of usually multicellular eukaryotic organisms that are heterotrophs (cannot make their own food) and have important roles in nutrient cycling in an ecosystem. Fungi reproduce both sexually and asexually, and they also have symbiotic associations with plants and bacteria. However, they are also responsible for some diseases in plants and animals. The study of fungi is known as mycology.
Fungi are heterotrophic in nutrition.
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