Yes.
bacteria copy or reproduce them selves by keeping warm, moist, and have plenty of 'food' to feed on.
All bacteria grow and reproduce
Viruses can reproduce by infecting host cells and hijacking their machinery to replicate. Additionally, living organisms like bacteria, plants, and animals have the ability to reproduce through sexual or asexual means, passing on their genetic material to their offspring.
If reproduce means producing offspring/copies of itself, then yes. If reproduce means reproducing sexually (not asexually), then no. Bacteria reproduce through asexual reproduction -- making exact copies of themselves.
Bacteria can reproduce extremely quickly if in the right environment. Under favorable conditions, a single bacteria can reproduce 108 bacteria in twelve hours.
it is more likelly for bacteria to reproduce asexually. it is very rare for bacteria to reproduce sexually. but it is possible
Scarlet fever itself does not reproduce, as it is an infectious disease caused by the bacteria Streptococcus pyogenes. The bacteria reproduce through binary fission, a process where a single bacterial cell divides into two identical daughter cells. When an infected individual coughs or sneezes, the bacteria can spread to others, leading to new infections. Thus, the spread of the bacteria allows for the continuation of the disease.
The aim of all living things is to reproduce - it is how the species survives. Benefits of bacteria reproducing asexually include; no need to find another bacteria to reproduce with, rapid reproduction and it saves energy.
no... bacteria reproduce asexually which means they reproduce by themselves usually by spitting in half
A small number of the bacteria on meat can cause food poisoning.These bacteria enter the body and reproduce by dividing in the same way as cell in the body.Each bacterium can divide every 20 minutes.
The reason bacteria do not reproduce by mitosis is because bacteria do not contain chromosomes. There are numerous types of bacteria.
Bacteria can reproduce sexually and asexually. Sexually, two bacteria are involved, but asexually, the bacterium divides on its own in a process similar to that of cellular mitosis.