Social Sciences, asked by aaryabjain1234, 1 month ago

Structure of fungal body. Ans. ...​

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Answered by e12298nikhil
0

Answer:

A typical fungus consists of a mass of branched, tubular filaments enclosed by a rigid cell wall. The filaments, called hyphae (singular hypha), branch repeatedly into a complicated, radially expanding network called the mycelium, which makes up the thallus, or undifferentiated body, of the typical fungus.

Explanation:

Answered by garimagidiya2007
2

Answer: The key features of a fungal body are the mycelium . A fungal body has a mass of branched, tubular filaments enclosed by a rigid cell wall.  The main body of most fungi is made up of fine, branching, usually colourless threads called hyphae. The most commonly utilized cell shapes include spherical, ellipsoidal or cylindrical yeast cells or chains of highly polarised cylindrical cells which form pseudohyphae or hyphae

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