Biology, asked by Suyashsyal, 10 months ago

Differences between yeasts and moulds

Answers

Answered by tshivom9
4

Answer:

Yeast. Mold is a type of fungus that grows in multicellular filaments called hyphae. These tubular branches have multiple, genetically identical nuclei, yet form a single organism, known as a colony. In contrast, yeast is a type of fungus that grows as a single cell.

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Answered by VaibhavVerma71
2

Answer:

Both these fungi and yeast belong to the Fungus kingdom, and they are Eukaryotes.

Fungus is a small insect with a tendency to grow with the help of many composite films called hyphae, while yeast is a fungal food that has only one cell.

Fungi are long cells that look like threads that combine the formation of dirty molds, in some circular or circular easts in the mold. There are 1500 yeasts and cell size based on the type. It usually comes from 3 µm - 40 µm wide. There are 400,000 species of pottery and their size depends on the type. Yeast is not a wasteful type of fungus and fungus is a fungal fungus.

Not all types of clay cause disease or destroy food. Some are useful for biodegradation. Yeasts are used in the manufacture of alcoholic beverages containing ethanol. Ethanol is always produced by Fermentation through certain types of yeast. Yeasts are also used in baking, in bioremediation, in industrial ethanol production, in probiotics and in food or taste addictions.

Orients are found mainly in the oceans and reproduce by themselves. They repeat the germination or binary fission process in which the nucleus is divided into two or more nuclei. These are usually unicellular; but other types of yeast can become more cellular by the formation of a series of mixed cells (aka manga hyphae). Indications, on the other hand, reproduce sexually and physically into many cell phones.

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