No. Bacteria can not live on anything for longer than two weeks. The lifespan of bacteria, whatever surroundings it has is 8 hours. No longer
paper money has more germs
two conditions bacteria need to live
Bacteria can live in the tundra because tundras don't exist.
Archaebacteria called extremeophiles have some species that live entirely anaerobically. Bacteria [and other organisms] that respire using O2 as the 'final' electron acceptor are termed to be Aerobic, while bacteria [and the odd organism] that has the biochemical capacity to Live without O2 are termed to be Anaerobic.
The bacteria live off of cellulose and support the life of the termite.
paper money has more germs
no
No, bacteria can not live anywhere near that time in any condition
It's got bacteria in live yogurt
78 and 6 weeks women probbly live longer
No some mammals are in bellies for 10 weeks and only live 4 days. or cicatas come out every 17 years and only live 1 year
Bacteria CAN live on Earth.
Six to eight weeks, longer if you live in a remote area.
Bacteria live any place you can think of. (Everywhere.)
The live R bacteria acquired a capsule and became live, virulent S bacteria.
yes bacteria does live near the shore
They don't. Worker honey bees live for around 6 weeks in summer and 6 months in winter. The queen can live for about 4 years.