Domain Bacteria is composed of organisms that are much more common than Archaea and live almost anywhere. There are more bacteria in a person's mouth than there are people in the world. Many are decomposers, some are photosynthesizers, and a few cause disease. Most bacteria cause disease by producing exotoxins that harm human cells, while others cause illness as a result of glycoproteins found on the outside of their capsules. There are many shapes that bacteria can come in, but three of the main ones are cocci, bacilli, and spirochete. Cocci are spherical prokaryotic cells that are usually found in clusters or colonies. Some cocci form chains; bacteria of this type are called streptococci. Bacilli are rod shaped cells that are usually found individually, although a few form pairs, diplobacilli, or chains, streptobacilli. Spirochetes are the last group. The bacteria in this group are helically shaped and usually are found alone. They can reach .5 mm long but are extremely thin.
There are two domains for bacteria. The bacteria domain and the Archea domain. It also belongs to the bacterium genus.
archae is the common name of the domain bacteria
There are two - Archaebacteria and Eubacteria.
The eubacteria (true bacteria) is an older classification, now just called bacteria, which is the domain itself.
The other domain of prokaryotes is now called archaea.
Prokaryota
Unicellular prokaryotic organisms are actually broken up into the Bacteria and Archaea domains. The Bacteria domain has several shapes, and the Archaea domain generally resembles the bacteria domain.
Unicellular prokaryotic organisms are actually broken up into the Bacteria and Archaea domains. The Bacteria domain has several shapes, and the Archaea domain generally resembles the bacteria domain.
Both archea and bacteria are prokaryotic, meaning they have no nucleus.
Assuming you are using the three-domain schema of Archaea, Bacteria, and Eukarya, the answer is that Domain Eukarya is not prokaryotic.
Unicellular
Domain: Bacteria
Unicellular prokaryotic organisms are actually broken up into the Bacteria and Archaea domains. The Bacteria domain has several shapes, and the Archaea domain generally resembles the bacteria domain.
no bacteria is a domain
Unicellular prokaryotic organisms are actually broken up into the Bacteria and Archaea domains. The Bacteria domain has several shapes, and the Archaea domain generally resembles the bacteria domain.
Unicellular prokaryotic organisms are actually broken up into the Bacteria and Archaea domains. The Bacteria domain has several shapes, and the Archaea domain generally resembles the bacteria domain.
Domain- Bacteria
The eubacteria (true bacteria) is an older classification, now just called bacteria, which is the domain itself. The other domain of prokaryotes is now called archaea.
Both archea and bacteria are prokaryotic, meaning they have no nucleus.
Bacteria
Bacteria,
bacteria
bacteria.