Biology, asked by aradhna2675, 4 months ago

characterstics of mushroom cultivation

Answers

Answered by Shahyashvi535
0

Mushrooms can flourish in a variety of places — on lawns, near or on the surface of plants, in compost heaps, or in your garden. Because they lack the vascular systems of animals and plants to transport water and nutrients, they must grow in damp environments.

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Answered by vsskgl
0

Answer:

Mushrooms are the fruiting bodies of a fungus, just like apples are the fruiting bodies of an apple tree.  A mushroom is a kind of fungus with the Latin name of Agaricus bisporus.

Explanation:

Most mushrooms have a stalk, also called a stem, and a cap, which is generally disc-shaped. On the underside of the cap — especially in edible species you find at the supermarket — you may see a series of closely spaced slits, called gills; alternatively, this space can be occupied by pores. Mushrooms vary greatly in both size and color, and some of them, such as puffballs, don't conform to the stalk-and-cap shape. The parent organism of mushrooms, called a mycelium, lies beneath the soil, and a single one of these can cover as much as 1,500 acres.

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