Biology, asked by strahan2004, 6 months ago

What is difference between septate and aseptate?(fungal kingdom)​

Answers

Answered by annette7
0

Answer:

Explanation:

Non-septate hyphae, also known as aseptate or coenocytic hyphae, form one long cell with many nuclei. They are the more primitive form of hyphae; species with septate hyphae diverged from a common ancestor with coenocytic hyphae. Most fungi with coenocytic hyphae belong to the class Zygomycetes.

Answered by bhupesh05raut
0

Answer:

Septate hyphae: The hyphae that are composed of individual cells separated from one another by cell walls. Aseptate hyphae: There are no cell walls in the individual cells and their nuclei are spread throughout the hypha.

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