Archaebacteria may eat other bacteria.
heltoph
Some types of archaebacteria can be harmful to humans by causing diseases like food poisoning and digestive system infections. Additionally, certain species of archaebacteria are known to thrive in extreme environments that are dangerous to humans, such as acidic hot springs and deep-sea hydrothermal vents.
It eats nutrients
they eat harmful bacteria that hurt us .
Archaebacteria are not necessarily harmful to humans or the environment. However, some extremophiles, a type of Archaebacteria, can cause issues in industrial settings, such as corrosion in oil pipelines. Additionally, some Archaebacteria are involved in methane production, which can contribute to greenhouse gas emissions.
Archaebacteria is part of the Prokaryote that resembles ancient bacteria. They have unique protein cell walls and cell membrane that use organic compounds such as acetate as food.
Archaebacteria
Some archaebacteria, such as thermophiles, live by hydrothermal vents. They are chemoautotrophs, which means that they produce their own food using energy from the chemicals in the vents instead of using energy from the sun. The energy starts in the vent, then goes to the archaebacteria, then to the organisms that eat those archaebacteria, and so on.
No, they mostly eat fish.
Archaebacteria lives in the bottom of the ocean. Archaebacteria lives in the bottom of the ocean.
There is no bat that will eat humans.