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Scientists classify all living things into six kingdoms, which is the broadest of the seven levels of classification. Of the six kingdoms, eubacteria and archaebacteria are probably the least well known. Each describes a very different kind of bacteria, but both affect our lives in different ways. Archaebacteria are the oldest living organisms on earth. They are prokaryotes and unicellular. Archaebacteria are found in very harsh conditions (such as at the bottom of the sea or in volcanic vents). This is thought to be because the early Earth's atmosphere was filled with poisonous gases and was very hot - nothing could survive, except the archaebacteria. These slowly gave way to modern organisms when the Earth's conditions settled down and oxygen was introduced to the atmosphere.

There are three phyla, or groups, of archaebacteria. The methanogens are characterized by their ability to harvest energy by converting H2 and CO2 into methane gas. They (and all archaebacteria) are obligate anaerobes, meaning they cannot live in the presence of oxygen. They are found in marshes and in the intestinal tracts of humans and some animals (cows, for example). The second phylum is the extreme halophiles. These organisms are names because they are salt-loving. Though salt kills most bacteria, it helps the extreme halophiles to thrive. They are found in the Dead Sea, the Great Salt Lake, and other areas with a high salt content. The third phylum is the thermoacidophiles. These bacteria are found in extremely acidic conditions and in areas with very high temperatures. They can survive in areas with temperatures as high as 230 degrees Fahrenheit and with pHs below 2 (hydrochloric acid, which is incredibly strong, has a pH of 1). These locations include volcanic vents and hydrothermal vents (cracks in the ocean floor where scalding water leaks out). The eubacteria are more complex, and common, than the archaebacteria. It is the eubacteria that most people are talking about when they say bacteria, because they live in more neutral conditions. They can be found everywhere around us - in our bodies, our food, etc. There are four phyla of bacteria, some of which are divided into subgroups. Cyanobacteria are photosynthetic, like plants, which means that they use the sun's energy to make food for themselves. They are thought to be the second organisms in existence, because they give off oxygen as a byproduct. This allowed aerobic organisms (ones that need oxygen to survive) to develop. They are found in the water and were once thought to be blue-green algae (however, they lack a membrane-bound nucleus and chloroplasts). Spirochetes are gram-negative (a gram stain is a technique for classifying bacteria which will be explained later), spiral-shaped, and heterotrophic. Some of them live in the presence of oxygen, others don't. They may be parasitic, living symbiotically (where two organisms live off each other), or free-living. One type of spirochete causes syphilis. Gram-positive bacteria are not all gram-positive, despite the same. They are grouped together due to other similarities. This phylum includes the strain of streptococcus bacteria that causes strep throat. It also includes the bacteria that produces yogurt, by growing and fermenting in milk (producing lactic acid). These bacteria also produce many of our antibiotics. Proteobacteria is one of the largest phyla of all the bacteria. Many are gram-negative. They are divided into several subgroups, such as enteric bacteria, chemoautotrophs, and nitrogen-fixing bacteria. The enteric bacteria live mainly in intestinal tracts, like E. Coli. The chemoautotrophs oxidize chemicals in minerals to obtain energy. The nitrogen-fixing bacteria are essential to many ecosystems - one type converts the unusable nitrogen in the atmosphere to ammonia, the form plants can use most easily. Beyond these classifications, all eubacteria are classified by gram staining. This is a process that determines many things - resistance to antibiotics, for one thing. It is also one of the first things scientists will do when trying to identify an unknown bacteria. It involves staining a group of bacteria with four different liquids. First, crystal violet is added. Then it's stained with iodine, and finally with safranin. Then it goes through an alcohol wash. The bacteria that retain the purple stain from the crystal violet are gram-positive, and those that take on the pink stain from the safranin are gram-negative. This has to do with the outer layer of the cell - gram positive bacteria have a thick layer of peptidoglycan, which absorbs the gram stain. Gram-negative bacteria have a thick lipid bilayer on the outside, which is selectively permeable - not everything can pass through it, and one of those things is the gram stain. The gram-positive bacteria (since things can pass through it easily) are much more susceptible to antibiotics than gram-negative bacteria. Another way bacteria are classified is by their shape. There are three different general shapes - bacilli, cocci, and spirilla. Bacilli are oblong and thick, cocci are round, and spirilla are spiral-shaped. When cocci occur in chains, they are called streptococci. When they occur in bunches (like grapes), they are staphylococci. They are also classified by the way they move. Some bacteria are nonmotile. Others move in a corkscrew motion, by gliding, or with flagella. Bacteria in one phylum can have more than one way of moving. As one can see, there are many different kinds of bacteria. It is a complex and interesting, though tiny, world. Bacteria are all around us, gliding, spiraling, and using flagella to swim about in their tiny world. However, they have more of an impact than we first realize, as we can see. Bacteria are a very important part of the world around us. Source: Towle, Albert: Modern Biology. Harcourt Brace and Company, Texas, 1999.

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who knows..(;

sorry to burst yalls bubbles but i have no idea. <3

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Archaebacteria have more sources of energy then Eukaryotes do. These include organic compounds and gases. Some can get their energy from the sunlight.

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chemosynthesis

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on other animals because there nonliving

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Q: How do archaebacteria get nutrition?
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What nutrition does archaebacteria need?

from there parents


What is the type of nutrition for archaebacteria. Autotrophic or heterotrophic?

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What is the common name for the Archaebacteria kingdom?

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What is archaebacteria where does it live and what it feeds on or produces?

Archaebacteria lives in the bottom of the ocean. Archaebacteria lives in the bottom of the ocean.


What nutrition do archaebacteria need?

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What is one kind of archaebacteria?

one kind of archaebacteria is the methanogens


What kingdom does the archaebacteria belong to?

They have their own kingdom called Archaebacteria.


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Yes, archaebacteria have a cell wall.


Does archaebacteria have complex cells?

archaebacteria consists of complex cells


Are archaebacteria and eubacteria both protists?

Both archaebacteria and eubacteria


What are three typess of archaebacteria?

Here are the 3 types of Archaebacteria Archaebacteria&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt; 1. Methanogens 2. Halophiles 3. Thermoacidiophiles


What is the cell type of eubacteria and archaebacteria heterotrophic or autotrophic or both?

The majority of archaebacteria are autotrophs. However a small percentage of archaebacteria is heterotrophic.