Biology, asked by smush3, 1 year ago

differentiate b/w fungi and plants?
any 4 differences.

Answers

Answered by Avantika1111
1
1. Fungi is a type of bacteria but plant is plant.
2. Fungi drive there food from host but plant make there own.
3. Fungi lives in colonies but plant not.
Answered by Harnoor02
0
Fungi and plants differ in many ways.

First, plants use sunlight as an energy source and a carbon dioxide as a sole carbon source in a process called photosynthesis. Fungi, like animals, use premade organic compunds as both carbon and energy source. Hence, fungi do not have chloroplasts nor chlorophyll.

Although both fungi and plant cells have cell wall, it is quite different in structure and composition. While plant cell wall is composed of cellulose, cell wall in fungi is made from chitin and beta-glucan mollecules.

Fungal cells grow differently than plant cells. They grow as filamentous structutres called hyphae which extend at their tips. Similar structures in some algae grow by repeated cellular division. Unlike plants, fungi do not form specific tissues, nor organs. Instead, branched network of hyphae forms mycelium in most fungal species.

Fungi store glycogen as energy reserve, as animals do. Plants store starch.

There are major differencies in fungal and plant reproduction. For example, fungi never produce fruits nor seeds.

In the end, fungi and plants have different DNA sequences. Fungal DNA is more similar to those of animals than to plants.

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