Mushrooms are the Fruiting Bodies of Fungi fact


Are all mushrooms fungi?

Are Mushroom and Fungi the Same Thing?

All mushrooms are fungi, but not all fungi are mushrooms. Mushrooms are the fruiting body of fungi that typically grow above ground. Or at least, that is true generally speaking. Fungi is a large kingdom and for a fruiting body of a fungi to be a mushroom it must meet some criteria (which isn’t always fully agreed upon) like having spores on the outside of their bodies (why it is debatable whether or not a truffle is a mushroom).

Fungi is a whole Kingdom of species, and a vital part of earth’s ecosystem. Mushrooms aside, fungi also include yeast, mildew, and mold (none of which are mushrooms, but all of which are fungi).[1][2]

Thus, fungus refers to all organisms in the fungi Kingdom. Mushroom just refers to the specific part of mushroom-bearing fungi that fruits and spores (botanically at least, culinary the whole mushroom-bearing fungi is typically called a mushroom).

This is similar to the difference between flowers, fruits, nuts, and vegetables, an apricot tree technically has all these things, but only the apricot (and its seed) are technically fruit (anything that doesn’t come out of the flower is a vegetable, everything that does is a fruit, including nuts).[4]

So what is a fungi anyway? This video shows the life cycle of fungi. From spores, to fungi, to mushroom, and then back to spores again. The cycle repeats.

FACT: There is a giant fungi that covers 2,384 acres (965 hectares) of soil in Oregon’s Blue Mountains, that is 1,665 football fields, or nearly four square miles (10 square kilometers).

What Makes a Mushroom a Mushroom?

A mushroom is any spore bearing fruiting body of a fungus generally speaking. This is true even though we call other parts of the fungi mushrooms (such as a mushroom stem).

Any part of a fungus that isn’t a spore-bearing fungal fruit, isn’t a mushroom. This is analogous to how all fruits come from flowers, and all vegetables are the non-fruit parts of plants.

Fungi themselves have several features that make them mushrooms including a cap and a spore bearing surface (which can be gills, pores, ridges, or teeth). The stem of a mushroom is a fungus and not part of the mushroom, and other types of fungus like mold, mildew, and yeast can be single celled and don’t have the same anatomy as mushrooms. See a breakdown of the different spore bearing mechanisms here.

FACT: In common language it is fine to call a fungus and mushroom, but technically speaking only the cap and spore bearing surface is a mushroom. This is true even though the word fungus comes directly from the Latin word fungus, which literally means mushrooms.[3]

I Am A Mushroom Hunter | INDIE ALASKA. An ecologist shares her love of fungus.

FACT: Fungi are one of a small number of different kingdoms of Eukaryota (multi celled organisms) along with plants, animals, and algae.

mushrooms-are-the-fruiting-bodies-of-fungi

What Makes a Fungi a Fungi?

Fungi are genetically different than plants and animals. In simple terms, they balance out plants and animals. Plants create the oxygen we have on earth as part of their process, mushrooms have a similar purpose. Fungi are the principal decomposers in ecological systems, as their process includes digesting food by secreting digestive enzymes into the environment. The result of this is the fertilization of the ground that plants live in.

Fungi Symbiosis

The symbiotic relationship between plants, animals, insects, fungi, and algae can’t be overstated. Life on earth wouldn’t survive without mushrooms. Over 90% of all plant species engage in mycorrhizal (symbiotic) relationships with fungi and are dependent upon this relationship for survival.

Fungi Symbiotic Relationship With Plants.

FACT: Fungi are genetically more closely related to animals than to plants.

FACT: Fungi is used as the basis for a lot of our medicine. Aside from the happy symbiotic relationships, fungi are often parasitic by nature. Like bacteria they often come as a house guest, wanted or not.

Notes

It’s almost like plants, animals, and fungi are a key to the reason life evolved on earth. The symbiotic relationship is in almost a “too good to be true” chemical balance with the earth. If that sentence perked your interest, why not take a look at where mitochondria and chloroplasts come from? They are the secret sauce in the evolution and symbiosis of plants, animals, and fungi.


Conclusion

You don’t have to be a mushroom to be a fungi, but all mushrooms are fungi. Is this a paradox? Not really, but it certainly sounds like it wants to be a paradox or a joke. Likely eating mushrooms will help us explore this line of thinking, or at least this, according to recent science.


References

  1. Mushroom” Wikipedia.org
  2. Sporocarp (fungi)” Wikipedia.org
  3. Difference Between Mushrooms and Fungus“. Differencebetween.com
  4. Mushrooms“. Eol.org

Author: Thomas DeMichele

Thomas DeMichele is the content creator behind ObamaCareFacts.com, FactMyth.com, CryptocurrencyFacts.com, and other DogMediaSolutions.com and Massive Dog properties. He also contributes to MakerDAO and other cryptocurrency-based projects. Tom's focus in all...

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akbar Supports this as a Fact.

exactly the mushroom are the fruting bodies of fungi

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Surinder Verma Did not vote.

Hello,

It’s very well said that “Mushrooms are the fruiting bodies of Fungi”. Because we can see mycelium anywhere but its not possible that mushroom will also be there.

I have a doubt/question if you can answer:
1. Is it some enzyme that is responsible for fruiting in Fungi? Or what is it? Is it actually possible to control the fruiting in some edible mushrooms? like stopping fruiting forever in some fungi or making it start fruiting.

Regards
Surinder Verma

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