Leaf-cutter ants, believe it or not, do not eat leaves. They gather fragments of leaves and deposit them in "gardens" in their nests. There, fungus grows on the leaves and THAT is what the ants eat. Also, mushrooms are a type of fungus. So if you eat mushrooms, YOU eat fungus!
Similarly, certain fungi can sometimes eat other fungi. An atypical example is the parasitic ascomycete, Hypomyces lactifluorum, which infects a host mushroom (fruiting body of a fungus). This specific combination, Hypomyces lactifluorum + (typically) Russula brevipes or Lactarius piperatus, is known as a single entity, the Lobster Mushroom. The cool part is that this parasite turns an almost inedible mushroom (Lactarius piperatus) into a culinary delight! By itself, this mushroom is described as acrid, hot, peppery, and unpleasant to taste, sometimes causing mild poisonings, but once thoroughly infected with Hypomyces lactifluorum, it becomes not only delicious, but also non-poisonous.
"Wasabi Mushroom Fungus" can refer to a type of mushroom fungus that produces a flavor reminiscent of wasabi when consumed. This fungus is sometimes used in culinary applications to add a spicy kick similar to that of wasabi root.
The state fungus of Minnesota is Auricularia auricula-judae, also known as wood ear, jelly ear, or black fungus. It was designated as the state fungus in 1984 due to its economic importance in timber production.
You are likely referring to a fungus called Ophiocordyceps unilateralis, also known as the zombie ant fungus. This fungus infects ants and manipulates their behavior, causing them to climb to a high point before killing them. The fungus then grows out of the ant's body to disperse its spores.
A puffball is a type of fungus belonging to the phylum Basidiomycota, not a zygote fungus. Puffballs reproduce by releasing spores from their fruiting bodies, which are structures formed by the fungus for spore dispersal.
The album "Fungus Amongus" by the band Incubus was released on November 1, 1995.
They eat people and fungus They eat people and fungus
The tiny musky rat-kangaroo of Australia is one rainforest animal that eats fungus.
fungus and snakes
The fish, including plankton.
oh no
trench foot when water forms fungus from being constantly submerged and the fungus eats your feet
either a beetle, a moth, or a grasshopper is just a few
none, but there is a type of ant which eats the fungus that grows on leves called the leaf cutter ant. they cut the leaves, drag them to a colony, do some stuff to it and grows fungus on it. they eat that fungus.
Dr. D also one of India's deadly dozen
Anything that eats anything is a consumer. An animal that eats another animal to survive is a carnivore. Herbivores eat plants. Cannibals eat their own species.
There are invertebrate flies, mites, collembolans, polychaetes, & nematodes that rely on fungus as a food source.
Yes it is because it can grow, and it has cells.