Archaebacteria are actually not animals. Animals are multicellular organisms comprised of eukaryotic cells (having a nucleus). Archaebacteria are single celled prokaryotes. They are not considered bacteria and are considered a separate domain in the three domain system (the other two are bacteria and eukarya).
Archaebacteria tend to live in extreme environments. One example is methanopyrus kandleri which can live at temperatures above 100 degrees celsius (above the boiling temperature of water) and was discovered living in sea vents on the ocean floor. Another example is methanobrevibacter smithii which is found in the human digestive system.
there both.
Plants, animals, fungi and protista.
mouth
air stupid
Archebacteria
heat salt and methane
Archebacteria are prokaryotic organisms. So they do not have nucleus.
it's archebacteria.
Domain bacteria and Domain archebacteria
Yes, the archebacteria are single cell organisms.
animalia, eubacteria, plantae, protista, fungi, archebacteria
Archebacteria are bacteria that have survived thousands of years, and first developed in the late Precambrian era. Archebacteria can survive in extreme temperatures, breathe in carbon dioxide, and can live in the harshest conditions. Archebacteria still live today, along with their more modern cousins of Eurbacteria.