Yes! (is there more you need for this question?)
"Symbiotic anaerobic bacteria"
Cellulomonas is one such example.
lactobacillus
In for example;cow's stomach
what type of symbiotic is
Bacteria living in the intestines of a cow to help it break down cellulose.
Mutualism
It depends on weather you develop an infection from teh bacteria. There are naturally occuring bacteria on our skin all the time.
Photosynthetic bacteria has evolved. Symbiotic living has turned it into chloroplasts
Yes, bacteria is an organism. Bacteria is large group of prokaryotic microorganisms that have a variety of different shapes and sizes and they have both parasitic and symbiotic relationships with animals and plants.
Legumes (e.g peas and beans). They form symbiotic relationships with Rhizobia bacteria which fix atmospheric nitrogen into nitrates which can be used by the plant.
Bacteria are Monera. Chloroplasts belong to Protista. Bacteria Do not have chloroplast which prepare food and are parasites while chloroplasts have chloroplast and prepare their own food. Diatoms are chloroplasts
Symbiotic.
NoHumans are unable to digest cellulose because the appropriate enzymes to breakdown the beta acetal linkages are lacking. (More on enzyme digestion in a later chapter.) indigestible cellulose is the fiber which aids in the smooth working of the intestinal tract.Animals such as cows, horses, sheep, goats, and termites have symbiotic bacteria in the intestinal tract. These symbiotic bacteria possess the necessary enzymes to digest cellulose in the GI tract. They have the required enzymes for the breakdown or hydrolysis of the cellulose; the animals do not, not even termites, have the correct enzymes. No vertebrate can digest cellulose directly.One of the comments indicated the reader is confused as to whether termites have the necessary enzymes to digest cellulose. The answer indicates, correctly, that they do not have the enzymes (innately). Instead, they have a symbiotic relationship with a bacteria that provides the needed enzymes. In other words, they have them, but only because a friendly organism supplies them with them.Reference: http://www.elmhurst.edu/~chm/vchembook/547cellulose.htmlfalse
They are thought to evolved from bacteria. Symbiotic living have turned them into organelles
It depends on weather you develop an infection from teh bacteria. There are naturally occuring bacteria on our skin all the time.
Cows, horses, sheep, goats, and termites have bacteria living inside their intestinal tract. These bacteria can break down cellulose that is in grass and other plants.
Photosynthetic bacteria has evolved. Symbiotic living has turned it into chloroplasts
Yes, bacteria is an organism. Bacteria is large group of prokaryotic microorganisms that have a variety of different shapes and sizes and they have both parasitic and symbiotic relationships with animals and plants.
Legumes (e.g peas and beans). They form symbiotic relationships with Rhizobia bacteria which fix atmospheric nitrogen into nitrates which can be used by the plant.
Cellulose is not a living material. This is because it is not made of cells and it is a sugar.
Because there are bacteria living in our guts which produce the enzyme (called cellulase) necessary to break cellulose into smaller parts. Otherwise it would be indigestable, and come out the way it came in.
To digest cellulose, organisms must produce the enzyme cellulase. Humans and termites are unable to produce cellulase themselves but termites have living in their gut simple organisms (protozoa and bacteria) which can produce the enzyme. This is an example of mutualism - a relationship between two species in which both organisms benefit. The protoza and bacteria benefit by receiving a constant supply of food (wood) from the termite. The termite benefits from the energy-rich sugar released from the cellulose by the termites. For more details see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Termite
Bioluminecence , or a symbiotic arraignment between an animal and a bacteria, is a natural light source given off by a living organism.