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"Algae" is a general term that includes plants and bacteria... but algae is a plant, and it does exist in reefs.
"Algae" is a general term that includes plants and bacteria... but algae is a plant, and it does exist in reefs.
Chloroplasts are NOT cells - so your answer would be no. BUT if you mean do chloroplasts exist in bacteria then the answer is Sometimes. Where the answer is yes the bacteria is referred to as blue-green algae.
Animals that live on bacteria include paramecium and amoeba. Besides eating bacteria, these organisms can also exist on algae and dead plant and animal material.
Neither, Cyanobacteria is a prokaryote. Animals and plants are Eukaryotes. They exist in separate domains of life. Photosynthesis originates in prokaryotic cells (bacteria) and plants are descended from eukaryotic protists (green algae) which had formed endosymbiosis with captured bacteria.
salmonella bacteria exist
Yes.
large colonies of bacteria know to exist in
A lake.
Before there was oxygen life tended to exist in water as a form of algae which breathed in carbon dioxide and exhaled oxygen like plants. bacteria also existed at underwater thermal vents like the ones they have discovered at the ocean floor.
They both benefit
Bacteria can live in the tundra because tundras don't exist.