They live in extream enviorments like at the bottom of the ocean.
Archaea can be heterotrophs, autotrophs, or even mixotrophs. Some archaea are known to use organic compounds as a source of energy and carbon, while others can produce their own energy through processes like chemosynthesis or photosynthesis.
well if you mean by distinguish as diff rent archaebacteria can live in extreme environment and it is an ancient bacteria but eubacteria cant live in extreme environment but it can live in food , air , and also in living things .
Archaea and eubacteria are most different in terms of their cell membrane structure, as archaea have unique membrane lipids, and their genetic machinery, which is more similar to eukaryotes than bacteria. These differences reflect distinct evolutionary lineages and adaptations to different environments.
Organisms that live in extreme environments are often found in domains Archaea and Bacteria. These extremophiles thrive in conditions such as high temperatures, acidic environments, high salinity, or high pressure, where most other organisms cannot survive.
Bacteria archaea
bacteria domain archaea
No, archaea and protists are very similar but they do not live together in colonies. Protists is anything that doesn't fit in the category of the other kingdoms. Hope this helped!
A group of microorganisms that resemble bacteria but are different from them such as the composition of their cell walls. Archaea usually live in extreme, often very hot or salty environments. The archaea are considered a separate kingdom in some classifications. Some scientists believe that archaea were the earliest forms of cellular life.
Archaea. Means " old ones " or " ancient ones " and this is because these type of bacteria were first in the bacterial linage.
about archaea
Archaea can be heterotrophs, autotrophs, or even mixotrophs. Some archaea are known to use organic compounds as a source of energy and carbon, while others can produce their own energy through processes like chemosynthesis or photosynthesis.
The bacteria cell wall is made of peptidoglycan, while archaea cell walls lack peptidoglycan. Also, the archaea cell membrane contain ether linkages, while the bacteria cell membrane contains ether bonds.
All life belongs to one of 3 domains: archaea, eukaryota, or bacteria. The archaea resemble true bacteria in shape but live in extreme conditions such as excessively hot, salty or acid. They differ genetically by possessing introns while true bacteria do not.
well if you mean by distinguish as diff rent archaebacteria can live in extreme environment and it is an ancient bacteria but eubacteria cant live in extreme environment but it can live in food , air , and also in living things .
Firstly, there is no such thing as a 'common scientific name'; that is a contradiction, containing two opposites. The scientific name for the Archaea is Archaea.
Archaea and eubacteria are most different in terms of their cell membrane structure, as archaea have unique membrane lipids, and their genetic machinery, which is more similar to eukaryotes than bacteria. These differences reflect distinct evolutionary lineages and adaptations to different environments.
Methanococcus jammaschii is one example of the Archaea kingdom. More names /examples can be found at the Related Link below. Archaea, unlike bacteria, does not have peptidoglycan (also known as murein), which is a polymer consisting of sugars and amino acids that forms a mesh-like layer outside the plasma membrane of only bacteria and helps form the cell wall. Archaea is more related to eukaryotes than bacteria, which is why the name changed for Archaeabacteria to just Archaea. They live in extreme conditions, but can be found in other places, such as 30% of marine microbes. Archaea does not cause infections to humans. One example of Archaea is Methanococcus jammaschii, which is one of the first to make the above classification clear.