yes it does
Many ancient bacteria live in extremely hot or salty water. True bacteria describes one-celled organisms that have no separate nucleus.
Bacteria that live in extreme environments. The big three live in extremely hot water, super salty water, or extremely acidic water.
Extremophiles are organisms which live in very extreme extreme condition, such as a bacteria which lives in extremely salty water, or lives in highly acidic water.
Organisms that live in extremely hot environments are called thermophiles, such as certain bacteria and archaea. Organisms that thrive in extremely salty environments are known as halophiles, like some species of archaea and certain types of algae. These extremophiles have adaptations that allow them to survive and even thrive in these harsh conditions.
Halophiles, which are a type of bacteria and archaea, thrive in extremely salty conditions. They have adapted to survive in environments such as salt flats, salt mines, and salt lakes by maintaining a balance of salts inside their cells to prevent dehydration.
Ancient bacteria is has only one cell and no separate nucleus. These organisms may live on land or in water, and many of them live in extremely hot or salty habitats. They make their own food.
No they cannot, its why they're so called.
They live in flat water. nah just jokes i dont know. i think salty
Most do.
for me its yes!.we didn't put any salt to make it salty when we cooked it, and when i taste it, its kind of salty because oysters live under the water (sea or river). In river it taste also salty because of the tide. The tide is a salty water so it goes inside of the shell of oyster.
no they cant
The Dead sea contains extremely salty water which is up to six times the salt content of the ocean. The deepest water is the saltiest, while the surface is less salty because it is fed by the Jordan River. Nothing can live in such salty density; neither animal nor plant. If fish accidentally swim into the Dead Sea, they die immediately because of the high salt content. Also, because salt crystals line the edges of the Dead Sea, nothing can live directly around it either. The Dead sea contains extremely salty water which is up to six times the salt content of the ocean. The deepest water is the saltiest, while the surface is less salty because it is fed by the Jordan River. Nothing can live in such density; neither animal nor plant.