Archaea or archaeabacteria are bacteria that are able to live in extreme conditions. They are single-celled organisms lacking a nucleus. Eubacteria have linked lipids in their cell membrane and can only survive in more normal conditions.
It depends. Not all bacteria and archaea can share the same environment. Most archaea are extremophiles, i.e., they live under extreme environments like high salt concentration, marshy lands, radioactive soil, etc. All bacteria however are not extremophiles. There do exist certain species who live in environments having high temperature (thermophiles), low temperature (psychrophiles), etc but most bacterial species are mesophiles and live under conditions of normal temperature (around 25 to 38 degree celsius). Moreover, temperature is not the only limiting factor. Any kind of extremity that would otherwise be lethal to most living forms are lovely places for archaea to live in. Have you ever wondered why cowdung is a good fuel source? Its because of archaea called methanogens which produce methane from the hydrocarbons present in cowdung. They are thus beneficial to us in a way!
They can be both..they are mostly heterotrophs do as they rely on other organsims to live
They live in extream enviorments like at the bottom of the ocean.
Archaea and Bacteria.
Archaea or archaeabacteria are bacteria that are able to live in extreme conditions. They are single-celled organisms lacking a nucleus. Eubacteria have linked lipids in their cell membrane and can only survive in more normal conditions.
Most extremophiles are simple, single-celled life forms, yet many are not. Extremophiles occur in all three domains of life: bacteria, archaea, and eukaryotes. ... However, archaea aren't restricted to extreme environments; they live in most of the same places as bacteria
bacteria domain archaea
No, archaea and protists are very similar but they do not live together in colonies. Protists is anything that doesn't fit in the category of the other kingdoms. Hope this helped!
It depends. Not all bacteria and archaea can share the same environment. Most archaea are extremophiles, i.e., they live under extreme environments like high salt concentration, marshy lands, radioactive soil, etc. All bacteria however are not extremophiles. There do exist certain species who live in environments having high temperature (thermophiles), low temperature (psychrophiles), etc but most bacterial species are mesophiles and live under conditions of normal temperature (around 25 to 38 degree celsius). Moreover, temperature is not the only limiting factor. Any kind of extremity that would otherwise be lethal to most living forms are lovely places for archaea to live in. Have you ever wondered why cowdung is a good fuel source? Its because of archaea called methanogens which produce methane from the hydrocarbons present in cowdung. They are thus beneficial to us in a way!
They can be both..they are mostly heterotrophs do as they rely on other organsims to live
They live in extream enviorments like at the bottom of the ocean.
The domain Archaea is comprised of most of the early, single celled organisms most often referred to as extremophiles.
Archaea and Bacteria.
yes! Google the human microbiome.
Archaea (prokaryotic organisms which live in extreme environments)Bacteria (prokaryotic organisms, includes most disease-causing microorganisms)Eukaryote (eukaryotic organisms, contains the 5 kingdoms of Protista, Fungi, Plantae, Animalia, and Monera)
A group of microorganisms that resemble bacteria but are different from them such as the composition of their cell walls. Archaea usually live in extreme, often very hot or salty environments. The archaea are considered a separate kingdom in some classifications. Some scientists believe that archaea were the earliest forms of cellular life.