Most nitrogen-fixing bacteria live in little houses, or nodules, on the roots of plants called legumes.
The question centres around the evolution of terrestrial plants.
4.4bil years ago
soil
Bacteria will evolve faster than humans .It is because it has less number of cells and less no. of genes .
Most bacteria evolve quickly (in relation to mammalian evolution) because their reproductive cycle is much shorter than "higher" life forms.
Bacteria, they reproduce so fast you see them evolve.
the smallest unit of evolution is population.
It's that we all evolved from some sort of bacteria, but heres the question you mean. What did we evolve from when the Dinosaurs got wiped out? did we start again?
how do bavteris change and evolve
Bacteria.
No.
Bacteria will evolve faster than humans .It is because it has less number of cells and less no. of genes .
Most bacteria evolve quickly (in relation to mammalian evolution) because their reproductive cycle is much shorter than "higher" life forms.
No, all life evolves. Bacteria evolve, viruses evolve, protists evolve, plants evolve, fungi evolve and animals evolve. Evolution is driven by Natural Selection. So, no. The evolution of all life on Earth is driven by Natural Selection: all bacteria, plants, animals, mammals, fish, insects, biochemical pathways, behaviours et cetera evolve by Natural Selection.
Nonvascular plants
Bacteria, they reproduce so fast you see them evolve.
All bacteria can mutate and evolve, Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus (MRSA) is the best example of a bacteria changing to adjust to its environment.
The question centres around the evolution of terrestrial plants.
Oxygen Production.
No because God created everything.