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Yogita Ingle 5 years, 7 months ago
Although mushrooms grow from the ground, they are not plants! Instead, mushrooms are a part of a completely different kingdom called fungi. Other examples of fungi are yeasts and molds. Fungi can be unicellular or multicellular, use spores to reproduce, are made of a mass (mycelium) of filaments called hyphae, contain chitin in their cell walls, and are heterotrophic.
The fact that fungi are heterotrophs is the point of interest in answering this question. Unlike producers that make their own food (such as plants), heterotrophs are consumers and must eat other things in order to survive. However, fungi are not like animals. They do not have digestive organs. Instead, fungi digest organisms outside of themselves. This is done by releasing digestive enzymes externally. These enzymes break down organic compounds in the ground. Once the organic material is decomposed, the fungi can absorb it using its hyphae.
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Yogita Ingle 5 years, 7 months ago
The new fungi grow from its spores. The fungal spores keep floating in the air. The spore is covered with a hard covering which protects it form unfavourable conditions. Under favourable conditions, a spore germinates and grows. Rainy season provides favourable conditions such as hot and humid climate for the germination of fungal spores. Thus, we find fungi growing on pickles, leather, clothes and other articles that are left in hot and humid weather for long time.
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Yogita Ingle 5 years, 7 months ago
Rhizobium is the bacteria that live in symbiotic association with the root nodules of the leguminous plants. Fixation of nitrogen cannot be done independently. That is why rhizobium requires a plant host. Rhizobium is a vital source of nitrogen to agricultural soils including those in arid regions. They convert dinitrogen into ammonia. Ammonia, being toxic in nature. is rapidly absorbed into organic compounds.
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