Friends, as usual, Friday we have a FunFriday event and I took the time to write a little. Today I went to the pearl factory garden not far from my house about an hour's drive. My goal there because yesterday when I passed the garden, I seemed to see a flash of light that amazed me. To be sure, apparently the flash came from a beautiful fungus that grew on a coconut tree which presumably had been rotting for about a month. Fungi are generally microscopic and macroscopic in size. Reproduction can occur sexually or asexually.
In the lessons we have seen in biology lessons, fungi are known as fungi and the science that studies them is called mycology.
The following is an explanation of the characteristics of fungi and their body structure and reproduction.
Fungi are eukaryotic, nonphotosynthetic organisms, whose bodies are flexible. The majority of the species are microscopic fungi, which are fungi whose colonies resemble bacterial colonies.
How fungi get nutrients from the soil.
Mushrooms get nutrition by absorbing organic molecules from the environment around them. They grow like animals, they store energy in the form of glycogen.
Most fungi are saprophytes that live by absorbing organic compounds from dead organisms and this characteristic makes them play a very important role as recyclers of organic matter that are very important in nature.
The general structure of the fungal body is composed of multicellular filaments or threads, but some are composed of single cells.
Basically, fungal body cells are composed of tiny threads called hyphae. This fungus has a tubular cell wall that surrounds the plasma membrane and cytoplasm of the cell. Fungal cell walls are formed by a strong and flexible polysaccharide substance.