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Common black bread mold is a zygote fungi, and all of the mycorrhizae are zygote fungi, or zygomycetes (the suffix -mycete means "fungus".) They all are composed only of hyphae, which gives rise to another common name for this phylum: the Threadlike Fungi.
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www.davidlnelson.md/Cazadero/Fungi.htm
www.davidlnelson.md/Cazadero/Fungi.htm
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Threadlike fungi is a kind of fungi that normally lives in soil. It is Eukaryotic organism that can reproduce sexually and asexually. A example of this fungi is mold, a fungus that looks like wool of cotton.
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_is_threadlike_fungi
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There are over 100,000 types of fungi living in the world. Threadlike fungus is most likly in your backyard. Go take a look
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Where_do_threadlike_fungi_liv...
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Thread-like fungi that grow in soils at high elevations may play an important role in restoring whitebark and limber pine forests in Canada. Researchers are looking for ways to use fungi to help pine seedlings get a strong start. ... Cripps' role in the project is to identify native mycorrhizal fungi-
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www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/07/090717150250.htm
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Most fungi are saprobes. Recycle matter in our environment. Divided into 3 main groups. Threadlike fungi. Sac fungi. Club fungi. Threadlike Fungi ...
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www.teachertools.org/documents/Traits%20Of%20Protists.d...
www.teachertools.org/documents/Traits%20Of%20Protists.doc
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Fungi are eukaryotes* that lack chlorophyll and cannot ingest food. Most fungi feed on dead organisms or other nonliving material by releasing digestive juices into organic* matter and then absorbing nutrients. ... Threadlike fungi- have spores found in round cases. Bread mold is a common example.
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www.spacesciencegroup.org/sootw/Default.asp?Theme=ecolo...
www.spacesciencegroup.org/sootw/Default.asp?Theme=ecology&pagename=fungi
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A. Procedure for eating in fungi ... 1. Hyphae of two fungi grow together and produce fruiting bodies with spores that contain genetic material from both of the original hyphae. ... 1. Thread-like Fungi...
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www.mccsc.edu/~rhudson/fungi.html
www.mccsc.edu/~rhudson/fungi.html
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Some fungi are unicellular organisms, but most are made of threadlike filaments called hyphae. These hyphae stretch into food sources and absorb nutrients from the environment. A mass of hyphae is called a. Because hyphae are able to reach very far, a fungus can increase its surface area for absorption of more nutrients.
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bionerds.freeservers.com/catalog.html
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A collection of odd facts and the latest research about fungi ... Threadlike fungi grow in and around the roots of plants, helping them absorb minerals and water. But what happened when plants first left the water for the land hundreds of millions of years ago is less clear.
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www.nifg.org.uk/facts_a.htm
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