Bacteria live in and on animals, humans and plants.
Bacteria came before plants. Bacteria are one of the oldest forms of life on Earth, dating back billions of years. Plants evolved much later from simpler organisms, eventually developing the ability to photosynthesize and becoming the diverse group we know today.
Every organism on Earth (besides plants, bacteria, cells, etc.) is an animal!
A plant is a living thing that grows in the earth. Plants draw nutrients from the soil, sunlight, and water to undergo photosynthesis and grow.
no because bacteria helps digest our food and it also is one of the main decomposers.
every where plants, your body, paper, every where. Even in your food. But don't get sick by reading that, sometimes bacteria is good for you.
No. They could not under the current regime of life on Earth. Bacteria, in their symbiotic, detrivorous, and other roles are critical to the life functions of plants and animals. If all bacteria were to die out, it is likely that everything living on the planet would die out. Oddly enough, the bacteria could survive without animals or plants.
Bacteria CAN live on Earth.
No person invented germs. Germs, or bacteria, are on earth to break down dead animals and plants.
Bacteria converts nitrogen into usable elements. They also are depended on as food and biomass producers. Life wouldn't continue if nutrients decomposed by bacteria weren't cleared from the earth's surface.
Bacteria helps in decomposition to create ecological balance. When something dies, it is bacteria that acts upon it to decompose so another organism can find it useful. Besides, bacteria also helps to fix nitrogen from the atmosphere into a form that plants can use.
Bacteria are ubiquitous / omnipresent in every habitat on Earth, growing in soil, acidic hot springs, radioactive wastes, water, and deep in the Earth's crust, as well as in organic matter and the live bodies of plants and animals.