Biology, asked by Anonymous, 1 year ago

yeast is a unicellular but placed under fungi why?

Answers

Answered by danoct2004
3
They are estimated to constitute 1% of all described fungal species. Yeasts are unicellular organisms which evolved from multicellular ancestors, with some species having the ability to develop multicellular characteristics by forming strings of connected budding cells known as pseudohyphae or false hyphae.
Answered by tanumalikuffchinu
0
fungi is eukaryotic ,multicellular and autotrophic mode of nutrition
but yeast is the exception in fungi

Anonymous: the ans is wrong I guess
Anonymous: it's not asked it's mode of nutrition or number of cells
Anonymous: But it's asked y is it placed under fungi
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