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A bacteria called E.Coli lives in our intestines and our body and e.coli live in symbiotic relation that means we give food to it and it gives us vitamin K in return so it is beneficial..
Monerans, now known as bacteria, have many beneficial effects. Some, such as the species that live in the intestines of cows, aid in digestion. In fact, eukaryotic cell origin is believed to have come from a symbiotic and benficial relationship between bacteria.
This answer is highly variable, the lower intestine can only function due to beneficial bacteria that live in it, and many bacteria aid plants in using nitrogen as well as in defeating parasites, however their also are various hostile strains of bacteria that have negative impact on various animals and plants, so overall this answer can be considered either depending on context
The live R bacteria acquired a capsule and became live, virulent S bacteria.
bacteria can live on its own and it is considered as a animal.
A bacteria called E.Coli lives in our intestines and our body and e.coli live in symbiotic relation that means we give food to it and it gives us vitamin K in return so it is beneficial..
Antibiotic are anti=against+ bio-=life. They kill any sort of life and can affect beneficial bacteria as well as the ones that are the target. Like being hit by "friendly fire".
Normal flora are beneficial microorganisms that live within the body. They would encompass all the good bacteria that live within your organs that serve various functions, such as promoting immunity or digesting food.
Monerans, now known as bacteria, have many beneficial effects. Some, such as the species that live in the intestines of cows, aid in digestion. In fact, eukaryotic cell origin is believed to have come from a symbiotic and benficial relationship between bacteria.
No, we couldn't. For one thing, our digestive systems would fail. We are filled with beneficial bacteria.
Two reasons, one is our lymphatic system (our immune system), and the other is the billions of other beneficial bacteria that live in and on all humans, which keep the bad bacteria at bay.
Bacteria CAN live on Earth.
Let's just put it this way, animals can't live without bacteria. I know that sounds crazy, but there are different kinds of bacteria. The kind that you and I think about a lot are hetatroph bacteria. They cause us to get sick. Autotroph bacteria on the other hand live in you and me inside our intestines. They also live in animals. If we and they didn't have them, we'd die. Hope this helps!
The bacteria in yogurt is necessary for the creation of the yogurt - those bacteria are actually what is responsible for transforming the milk into yogurt. They are left alive for you to eat because science is finding certain bacteria are very beneficial for your digestive system and can thus have many beneficial affects on health in general. You can read more about this if you look up "probiotics". Because of this, it is even possible to take these bacteria in pill form to get the benefits without eating the yogurt.
Your appendix is beneficial and you should keep it if you can :) . Researchers believe the appendix is a place that "grows" and holds beneficial bacteria ("good" bacteria) and it quickly replenishes your digestive tract if you lose a lot of good bacteria all at once (like if you get diarrhea or have to fight an intestinal illness). You can live without it, but you can fight off diseases and parasites better if you have it. If your appendix is inflamed, however, something has gone wrong and it is full of harmful bacteria, which is why your body goes septic (is filled with bad bacteria flooding the blood) if the appendix bursts.
This answer is highly variable, the lower intestine can only function due to beneficial bacteria that live in it, and many bacteria aid plants in using nitrogen as well as in defeating parasites, however their also are various hostile strains of bacteria that have negative impact on various animals and plants, so overall this answer can be considered either depending on context
Bacteria live any place you can think of. (Everywhere.)