Yersina pestis
Yersina Pestis is readily cured with antibiotics.
The bubonic plague is a form of Yersinia pestis. Y. pestis is a bacterium that is facultative and anaerobic. Other forms of Y. pestis include the pneumonic and septicemic plagues.
Yersinia pestis, the bacteria that causes the plague, obtains energy by metabolizing nutrients from its host. It uses glucose and other compounds to produce energy through processes like glycolysis and fermentation. Additionally, Y. pestis has specialized mechanisms to obtain energy and nutrients from blood and tissues during infection.
They had a tendency of dieing the nearly the same as any one else, the only difference being that they lived in better conditions and were healthier in the first place.
There's some disagreement on exactly what the Black Death was, though it's usually thought to have been caused by a bacterium known as Yersina pestis, which is still around today. While it's still possible to catch the plague, it's not usually fatal if treated in time; antibiotics are generally effective.
No. Yersinia Pestis is a bacterium and so is a prokaryote. Prokaryotes do not have such organelles.
Pestis in English means plague, ruin and sometimes death
The bacteria Pasteurella pestis was renamed Yersinia pestis in 1944 by the International Code of Nomenclature of Bacteria. This change in nomenclature was due to advances in microbiology and taxonomy that reclassified the bacteria into the Yersinia genus.
bacterium Yersinia pestis (formerly known as Pasteurella pestis)
Yesenia pestis is the bacteria, which causes plague. This is unicellular organism.
Yersinia pestis, AKA, Bubonic Plague