Archaea often grow in unusual environments that would be hard to reproduce in the lab.
it is difficult because as quick as your getti rid of the spores the bacteria will ammediatly grow back
fungi and bacteria grow from spores.
Yes, bacteria grows in coffee.
Some bacteria are autotrophs. This means they produce their own food, allowing them to grow on their own terms. As well, bacteria grow by binary fission, whereas fungi have to grow by either branching and elongating, or budding, which takes longer.
OxyphotobacteriaAnoxyphotobacteria is the term that describes bacteria that don't need air to grow
it is difficult because as quick as your getti rid of the spores the bacteria will ammediatly grow back
because it is a faster prcess with virus.
No, bacteria do not grow on fat
All bacteria grow and reproduce
fungi and bacteria grow from spores.
Monera is an obsolete name for the taxonomic group that once included bacteria and archaea (prokaryotes). Now it is no longer used. The organisms that that term refers to are incredibly diverse, and the cells themselves grow and reproduce, as all cells do!
There are a few different temperatures that allow you to grow bacteria. Warm temperatures tend to grow bacteria rather well.
There are many conditions that are required for bacteria to grow including plenty of sunlight. Bacteria also need water in order to grow.
It is actually wrong. The bacteria grow fastest in incubators.
Anaerobic bacteria don't need oxygen to grow.
Different bacteria grow in different conditons, such as inside different cells, or under temperature conditions. So to produce certain bacteria growths, will need other things inside a petri dish. So it will become very awkward, or even impossible. This is all appicable, if that bacteria, doesn't spread through air, meaning a lot of safety is also required.
No, not all bacteria can grow on a culture. Some bacteria require extreme environmental factors to grow, and survive, which you can't really try on a culture plate.