Here's four: Blind shrimp, giant tube worms, crabs, and clams. They are supported by bacteria.
Three different types of extremophiles are thermophiles (heat-loving), halophiles (salt-loving), and acidophiles (acid-loving). These organisms have adapted to survive in extreme environments such as hot springs, salt flats, and acidic mine drainage.
Another name for extremophiles is Archaea.
extremophiles
An extremophile is any microbe that thrives in extreme conditions of temperature, pressure, salinity, or concentrations of hostile chemicals. Many extremophiles belong to the kingdom Archaea, also known as Archaebacteria, and most known Archaebacteria are extremophiles. There are also extremophiles to be found outside the kingdom Archaea; for example there are bacteria and eukaryotic prokaryotes that are extremophiles, as well as species of worm, crustacean, and krill.
Some extremophiles that live in Mono Lake include halophiles, which thrive in high salinity environments, and alkaliphiles, which can survive in high alkaline conditions. These extremophiles have adapted to the unique chemistry of Mono Lake, allowing them to thrive in extreme conditions that would be harmful to most other organisms.
Three different types of extremophiles are thermophiles (heat-loving), halophiles (salt-loving), and acidophiles (acid-loving). These organisms have adapted to survive in extreme environments such as hot springs, salt flats, and acidic mine drainage.
Another name for extremophiles is Archaea.
If by extremophiles you mean anaerobic extremophiles, the answer is oxygen.
no
extremophiles
everywhere
extremophiles
Yes.
An extremophile is any microbe that thrives in extreme conditions of temperature, pressure, salinity, or concentrations of hostile chemicals. Many extremophiles belong to the kingdom Archaea, also known as Archaebacteria, and most known Archaebacteria are extremophiles. There are also extremophiles to be found outside the kingdom Archaea; for example there are bacteria and eukaryotic prokaryotes that are extremophiles, as well as species of worm, crustacean, and krill.
Yes, extremophiles can reproduce. Extremophiles are organisms that thrive in extreme environmental conditions such as high temperatures, high pressures, or acidic environments. They have adapted unique strategies to survive and reproduce in these harsh conditions.
Extremophiles are micro-organism in unusual (and normally fatal) locations, ex: sulfur lakes. Therefore, they can be studied by biologist (most common), microbiologist, evolutionary biologist, biochemists, geologists, biogeologists, and NASA scientists and astrobiologists (who study them to determine what other types of life might exist).
found in namibia