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2007-05-24 16:11:38 · 4 answers · asked by ja BOo! boo!! 1 in Science & Mathematics Biology

4 answers

Many things, after all they are two different kingdoms:

PLANTS: Autotrophs; Cell wall made of cellulose; Tissues like xylem, phloem; No Mycellium. Classified in Angiosperms or gymnosperms
FUNGI: Heterotrophs, decomposers; No plant tissues; Cell wall made of chitin; With mycellium, spores, classified in perfect and imperfect

2007-05-24 16:26:19 · answer #1 · answered by UNCLE GERARD 3 · 1 0

Fungi: absorptive heterotrophs with beta-glucan/chitin partitions and chitinous spores; regularly with walled multinuleate hyphae; without plastids, phagotrophy or photosynthesis; AAA lysine biosynthesis. you won't be in a position of assert that fungi are multicellular via fact yeasts are unicellular fungi, so pay attention of definitions of kingdom fungi that incorporate that.

2016-12-11 19:49:49 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

The most important difference is that fungi are heterotrophs (consumers) and plants are autotrophs (producers).

2007-05-24 16:14:57 · answer #3 · answered by ecolink 7 · 0 0

Plants have chlorophyll and fungi don't.

2007-05-24 16:16:50 · answer #4 · answered by Red 4 · 0 0

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