Yes, E. coli is a facultative anaerobic bacterium, meaning it can grow in both aerobic (with oxygen) and anaerobic (without oxygen) conditions.
E. coli is a facultative anaerobic bacterium, meaning it can survive in both oxygen-rich (aerobic) and oxygen-poor (anaerobic) environments.
A bacterium that needs oxygen is called an aerobic bacterium
E. coli is a bacterium, not a fungus or a protist. Bacteria are unicellular prokaryotic organisms, while fungi are eukaryotic organisms, and protists are a diverse group of mostly unicellular eukaryotic organisms.
Yes, E. coli is capable of surviving in both anaerobic (without oxygen) and aerobic (with oxygen) environments.
Yes, E. coli is capable of thriving in both aerobic (with oxygen) and anaerobic (without oxygen) environments.
E. coli is a facultative anaerobic bacterium, meaning it can survive in both oxygen-rich (aerobic) and oxygen-poor (anaerobic) environments.
Not. E Coli is a bacterium.
A bacterium that needs oxygen is called an aerobic bacterium
E. Coli Bacterium
No, it is not. E. coli is a unicellular prokaryote. It is a rod-shaped bacterium.
Yes
No, E. coli does not use photosynthesis as it is a bacterium that lacks the organelles necessary for this process, such as chloroplasts. Instead, E. coli obtains energy through other metabolic processes like fermentation or aerobic respiration.
Escherichia, the genus name of E. Coli. It is named after Theodor Escherich, who had discovered the bacterium.
E-coli
E. coli is a bacterium, not a fungus or a protist. Bacteria are unicellular prokaryotic organisms, while fungi are eukaryotic organisms, and protists are a diverse group of mostly unicellular eukaryotic organisms.
Yes, E. coli is capable of surviving in both anaerobic (without oxygen) and aerobic (with oxygen) environments.
Yes, E. coli is capable of thriving in both aerobic (with oxygen) and anaerobic (without oxygen) environments.