They have different types of cell walls and cell membranes.
Archeobacteria live in extreme conditions
Archeobacteria lack peptidoglycan in their cell wall
Archeobacteria have DNA more similar to eukaryotes
1. Archaebacteria are bigger
2.Other bacteria are smaller
3. Bacteria needs more food
Archabacteria differ from a eubacteria in the following ways; 1)archaebacteria lack peptidoglycan of eubacteria 2)different membrane lipids 3)archaebacteria have different DNA sequences
They have different types of cell walls and cell membranes.
Archea-1.cell wall made up of proteins and polysaccharides 2.Hydrocarbonds in cytoplasm are branched 3.Not sensitive to antibiotics like streptomycin 4.Protein synthesis begins with methionine 5.Several types of RNA polymerase available Eubacteria-.Cell wall made up of Peptidoglycan 2.hydrocarbons unbranched 3.sensitive to antibiotics 4.Protein synthesis phenyle methionine 6.only one type of RNApolymerase
Yes, Lactobacillus acidophilus is classified as a eubacteria. Eubacteria is one of the two main domains of bacteria, with the other being archaebacteria. Lactobacillus acidophilus is a type of bacteria that is commonly found in the human gut and is considered beneficial for human health.
It is a eubacteria. Both eubacteria and archaebacteria are prokaryotes that have no organized nucleus and no membrnae bound organelles. The difference between the two is that archae bacteria tend to live in extreme conditions such as hydrothermal vents that can get up to 95°C, in very acidic or salty environments, places with no oxygen, and a wide array of places as such. Archaebacteria usually fall under one of three categories: mathanogens (organisms that convert carbon dioxide to methanol), thermophiles (organisms that can live in very hot and acid environments), or halophiles (organisms that tend to live in extremely salty environments such as the Dead Sea). As saccharomyces cerevisiae (yeast) doesn't fall under any of these categories, it is a eubacteria. It is a fungus, and in most cases, fungi will always be eubacteria.
Bacteria is a member of the (Archaebacteria and Eubacteria) member because their used to be 5 kingdoms, so the scientist realized that there was 2 different kingdoms so they decided to make another one which was the 6 kingdom.The 5 kingdom was called Monera.
They have different types of cell walls and cell membranes.
They have different types of cell walls and cell membranes.
yes Archaebacteria are Prokaryotic. this is one of the class of bacteria. others classes are eubacteria, myloplasma, ricketssiae, actinomycetes, chlamydia.
eubacteria, cyanobacteria, and I can' t find the other one, ARCHAEBACTERIA
It's one of the 6 kingdomsanimalia, plantae, eubacteria, archaebacteria, protista, and fungi
One characteristic that all member of eukarya have that members of eubacteria do not have is cells with nuclei.
Archea-1.cell wall made up of proteins and polysaccharides 2.Hydrocarbonds in cytoplasm are branched 3.Not sensitive to antibiotics like streptomycin 4.Protein synthesis begins with methionine 5.Several types of RNA polymerase available Eubacteria-.Cell wall made up of Peptidoglycan 2.hydrocarbons unbranched 3.sensitive to antibiotics 4.Protein synthesis phenyle methionine 6.only one type of RNApolymerase
Bacteria are classified into the Kingdom Bacteria, also known as Monera. This kingdom consists of single-celled organisms with prokaryotic cells, lacking a nucleus and membrane-bound organelles. Bacteria are one of the three domains of life, along with Archaea and Eukarya.
The three domains of life are the Archaebacteria, Eubacteria and Eukarya. The six kingdoms of life fall into one of these domains.
Yes, Lactobacillus acidophilus is classified as a eubacteria. Eubacteria is one of the two main domains of bacteria, with the other being archaebacteria. Lactobacillus acidophilus is a type of bacteria that is commonly found in the human gut and is considered beneficial for human health.
One-celled organisms are referred to as prokaryotic and are less developed. The two kingdoms that have one-celled organisms are Eubacteria and Archaebacteria.
Archaebacteria are not classified in the same kingdom as eubacteria because they have fundamental genetic and biochemical differences, such as unique cell membrane components and gene sequences. These distinctions suggest that archaebacteria have evolved separately from eubacteria and are more closely related to eukaryotes in terms of evolutionary history.