No. Arch... means old, extremophiles live in extreme environments.
Archaea and Bacteria.
Prokaryotes that are found in environments that are extreme are classified in the Archaebacteria kingdom. The kingdom consists of single-celled microorganisms.
extremophiles. Usually, they're archaea.
archaebacteria
The archaebacteria kingdom is one of the six kingdoms. Organisms in this kingdom are also called Bacteria; they are unicellular and live in very extreme environments. The "common bacteria" belongs to another kingdom; the Eubacteria kingdom, bacteria in this kingdom differ from bacteria in the archaebacteria kingdom and they do not live in extreme environments.
In extreme environments
Archea Bacteria are a domain of organisms that live in extreme environments.
Archea
Archaea and Bacteria.
Prokaryotes that are found in environments that are extreme are classified in the Archaebacteria kingdom. The kingdom consists of single-celled microorganisms.
in the soil, swamps, and digestive tracts of animals
Archaebacteria
Protists can live in a large range of environments, including what are known as "extreme" environments. But most protists live in moist/ damp environments like ponds, swamps, lakes, creeks, that kind of thing.
Eubacteria live in extreme environments. archaebacteria live everywhere else.
Yes they do. They are usually adapted to horrid extreme conditions like ocean vents.
extremophiles. Usually, they're archaea.
extremophiles, meaning "lover of extremes"