Yes, there are some types of bacteria that carry out Anoxygenic_photosynthesis, which consumes carbon dioxide but does not release oxygen.
Examples include, but are not limited to: Chromatiaceae and Ectothiorhodospiraceae.
Yes. Cyanobacteria, green sulphur bacteria, purple bacteria, and Chloroflexi are all categories of photosynthesising bacteria.
Bacteria do not have chloroplasts, nor indeed any organelles. There is a theory (the "Endosymbiotic theory") that chloroplasts are descended from cyanobacteria that became internal symbiotes in eukaryotic cells.
No there are not any bacteria that can photosynthesize. This process needs certain parts that are only found in plants that rely on sun to properly take place.
Some do, for example cyanobacteria, purple bacteria, and green sulphur bacteria. But not all.
Of course there are photosynthetic bacteria. Best example is cynobacteria
Only cyanbacteria can
No, there are some photosynthetic protists and some photosynthetic bacteria.
Any bacteria, there are no photosynthetic bacteria.
photosynthetic membranes
photosynthetic ability
The four groups of photosynthetic bacteria are brownish nonsulfur, green sulfur, purple sulfur, and purple nonsulfur bacteria. Bacteria constitute a significant domain of what are referred to as prokaryotic microorganisms.
No, there are some photosynthetic protists and some photosynthetic bacteria.
Bacteria
Bacteria
Any bacteria, there are no photosynthetic bacteria.
Any bacteria, there are no photosynthetic bacteria.
In some bacteria, chlorophyll is located in photosynthetic membranes.
photosynthetic membranes
plantAlgae and some protozoans in kingdom protista are photosynthetic. Also some bacteria in kingdom monera are photosynthetic
In the Thylakoid membrane of the chloroplast
chlorophyll
Some micro organisms are photosynthetic. Some bacteria and protists belong to that
photosynthetic ability