There are some bacteria that live in extreme conditions they are called extremophiles. Bacteria that specifically live in very hot temperatures are called thermophiles. However your question could be 360 Kelvin or degrees Celsius or Fahrenheit; which brings us to the importance of units...
Certain bacteria live in hydrothermal vents on the ocean floor or in oil reservoirs within Earth at temperatures as high as 250oF.
Yes, bacteria can live in water. Some bacteria are aquatic, meaning they live in water environments such as oceans, rivers, lakes, and streams. These bacteria play important roles in nutrient cycling and overall ecosystem health.
Phytoplankton is a bacteria and it needs pretty warm water between 26 and 37 degrees Celsius to live and develop.
They can live in anything between 0c to tropical temps
total coliform bacteria
Bacteria that live in extreme environments. The big three live in extremely hot water, super salty water, or extremely acidic water.
Well I'm not an expert first off, but I did recently do an experiment to see how hot water must be to kill E. coli. To kill general bacteria, 110˙f should be sufficient, but most people don't have the water that hot, because it's too hot for them.(you still need soap to kill bacteria). But there are different temperatures for different bacterias. Like Legionella requires the water to be 170˙f. Again I'm not an expert, but if you really want to kill bacteria then use bleach, because most people can not tolerate or afford to wash their dishes every day with that hot of water. I recommend using a strong acid based soap. And just so you know, if you wash a dish in your water and it takes a while to dry on it's ow, then your not killing bacteria. The longer water is on anything, the more likely it is that bacteria will live. Sometmes, not all backterias can be kiled with the use of blaech.
Some common names for bacteria that live in water include cyanobacteria, heterotrophic bacteria, and nitrifying bacteria. These bacteria play essential roles in the aquatic ecosystem by participating in nutrient cycling, decomposition, and overall water quality maintenance.
Depends on the bacteria, most bacteria in our body is ok at 98.6 degrees. so by the body elevating our temps with fever we try to kill the bacteria.
the water temperature ranges from 10 degrees celsius to 99 degrees celsius
Chlamydia can't live in water. The bacteria can live for only a few minutes outside the body.
Germs can live on anything. If by harmful bacteria, then yes. They can. Even inanimate objects.