Aerobe
I think the answer is AEROBE
Yes. An aerobic organism is an organism that can grow and survive in the presence of oxygen. Mammals need oxygen to have cellular respiration, so they are obligate aerobes.
An anaerobe is an organism that thrives in an environment without oxygen. Facultative anaerobes prefer an oxygen-free environment but can survive in the presence of oxygen. Obligate anaerobes are destroyed by oxygen and cannot survive if it is present in their environment.
Facultative anaerobes can survive without oxygen but will use oxygen if it is present.
anaerobe
prokaryotic
The oxygen in the H2O
abiotic factors!!
oxygen is required in a process known as aerobic respiration. This is where an organism breaks down sugar step by step using oxygen to release energy which is used elsewhere in the organism.
abiotic factors
The element that greatly expands an organism's ability to produce energy is oxygen. The presence of oxygen in the bloodstream allows the biochemical processes to occur, which in turn sustain life.
On the basis of oxygen requirement microorganisms are classified asAerobes: organisms that use molecular oxygen as electron acceptor.Anaerobes: organisms that use some molecule other than molecular oxygen as electron acceptor.Facultative organisms : organisms that can use either molecular oxygen or some other chemical compound as electron acceptor.