KINGDOM FUNGI
Description: Cell walls are made mostly of the carbohydrate chitin (found in the exoskeleton system of insects). Fungi are eukaryotic and the majority are multicellular. Lacks chlorophyll and they are heterotrophic; they digest food outside the body and absorb it. Their basic body plan constitutes a mass of netlike filaments called hyphae. Most fungal hyphae are divided into cells by cross walls called septa. Some fungi are aseptate, lacking cross walls. Under favorable conditions asexual spores are produced by the millions and dispersed over a large area.  
Divergent Event: Arose from a choanoflagellate like protozoan by the origin of beta-glucan/chitin walls, with the simultaneous loss of phagotrophy. Fungi and the Animal kingdom divergered from a common ancestor 0.6 billion years ago.
Body Plan: Most are multicellular, but yeast is unicellular.
Metabolism: Heterotrophic; obtain their nutrients by absorption, by a process of chemoheterotrophic (feeding on preformed organic material).
Digestion: Extracellular; organisms digest then ingest by producing exoenzymes (enzymes that are secreted into the environment to break down dead organisms into small molecules that can be absorbed and used by the fungus). 
Nervous: None, but instead has an endocrine system. This system enables fungi to recognize and react to outside stimuli, in the form of available food sources.
Circulatory: Have no hearts, but they do have a circulatory system made up of masses of connecting hyphae (long, branching filamentous cells surrounded by tubular cell walls). The hyphae grow at the tips and expand into the nutrients the fungi is decomposing. The hyphae assist in nutrient exchange and in nutrient and water absorption. The hyphae makes up the circulatory system of fungi, since they are the cells that transport nutrients throughout the organism.
Respiratory: None, but their cells do go through cellular respiration, since they are heterotrophs.
Reproduction: Asexual (Conidia) and Sexual (Xylaria, a fungi that grows on dead wood)
Examples:
1. Sarcoscypha Coccinea
2. Chytridium (Chytridiomycota)
3. Coprinus comatus