Although yeast and bacteria are both unicellular organisms, yeast is not a bacterium. Yeast is considered to belong to the Fungus kingdom.
Yes,it is.
^^^ actually no it is not, it is classified as a fungi.
Viruses are, by far, the smallest. Bacteria and yeast cells have a complete cell structure, including the nucleus and all of the other parts of a cell. Viruses don't, so they have to inject their 'material' (I don't remember the name of the inside the virus) into the 'host' cell and force it to duplicate the viruses, which kills the host cell.
Bacteria, Mould & Yeast - (I think!)
Yeast, Bacteria, Fungi
They are all unicellular.
Yeast are cultured for longer periods of time than bacteria because they are 5 to 10 times bigger than bacteria.
Yeast is a fungi, bacteria is a moneran.
This is not entirely true. It is shown that Yeast is not a form of Bacteria Yeast is in the Kingdom Fungi, therefore it is a type of fungus. Some helpful bacteria is yeast.
Yeast and Bacteria. :)
Yeast is a yeast,or protozoa.
bacteria
You put a nuke on the yeast and you put bacteria on top then you set the bomb and run for your life
The bacteria yeast converts sugar into alcohol.
The bacteria that is used in winemaking is called 'yeast' or 'wine yeast'. Yeast are not bacteria. Yeast are used to ferment juice and make wine. The traditional yeast is Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Bacteria is also used for the malolactic fermentation of red wines and some whites. This is a decarboxylation of malic acid to lactic acid. The bacteria used is Oenococcus oeni.
Yeast is a bacteria... you eat as much as you can, or wish to, consume.
Yeast feed on sugars such as glucose and fructose, or sucrose and maltose. Some species can metabolize pentose sugars like ribose, alcohols, and organic acids. I don't think they 'feed' on bacteria.
the bacteria breathing
mold, bacteria, and yeast