Generally speaking bacterial cells (about 2 micrometer diameter) are much smaller than eukaryotic cells (about 25 micrometer diameter). Therefore a bacterial cell is smaller.
The bacteria cell is larger because onion cells are plant cells, and plant cells are smaller than bacteria cells
no, a bacteria cell is smaller
yes
Red blood cell
RBCs are smaller than dust mites and larger than E. coli.
The YEAST cell is by far the biggest cell out of a BACTERIUM and a VIRUS.... I know this 'cos it was on my science homework and 'cos i found it on another website which gave me the urge to put it here since the question hadn't been answered....x
Viruses are, by far, the smallest. Bacteria and yeast cells have a complete cell structure, including the nucleus and all of the other parts of a cell. Viruses don't, so they have to inject their 'material' (I don't remember the name of the inside the virus) into the 'host' cell and force it to duplicate the viruses, which kills the host cell.
All cells are smaller than human(except when you're comparing a chicken egg to an embryo)
Bacteria cells are smaller than animal cells. While a bacteria cell is about one micron, an animal cell is about 10 microns. From this data, about ten bacteria cells will fit into an animal cell.
there are some bacteria that approach the size of larger viruses but, viruses are smaller than bacteria
This is a very vauge question. While most "germs" are smaller than skin cells (viruses and smaller bacteria) some bacteria can be larger than skin cells. Though most aren't larger than white blood cells, the body's defenders.
Viruses are non-living entities that show characteristics of living beings inside another living cell. Viruses consist of genetic material surrounded by protein coat. They lack organelles or membranes. Thus, they are very much smaller than bacterial cells which have membranes, and sometimes even organelles. In fact, many viruses inhabit bacterial cells. They are called bacteriophages. The smallest bacteria are in the order of .3 micrometers, while the largest viruses are in the order of 400 nanometers. A virus is smaller than bacteria A virus is smaller than bacteria
Yes, viruses are smaller than bacteria.
A virus is many times smaller than either an amoeba or a bacteria. Perhaps thousands would fit into a bacterial cell.
I think so because viruses usually go inside bacteria and take over the bacteria cell But I'm totally sure
All the disease causing viruses are smaller in size than bacteria. Rickettsia and chlamydia are other groups of organisms, which are smaller than true bacteria.
I think so because viruses usually go inside bacteria and take over the bacteria cell But I'm totally sure
Bacteria is typically smaller than Eukaryotes. In fact, Eukaryotes have an organelle called the mitochondria which resemble an enveloped bacteria.
Red blood cell
The size of a typical bacterial cell is 0.5-5.0 micrometers, a average human cell is 10 micrometers.