An obligate species is a species of plant or animal that has a narrow range of defines habitat. They may occur in a tree cavity, a wet meadow, or a rock cave.
An obligate species is a species of plant or animal that has a narrow range of defines habitat. They may occur in a tree cavity, a wet meadow, or a rock cave.
clostridium and bacteroides species
Catalase and superoxide dismutase are two enzymes that are present in obligate aerobes but lacking in obligate anaerobes. These enzymes help in breaking down toxic reactive oxygen species that are produced during aerobic respiration.
No, obligate anaerobes do not express superoxide dismutase. This is because these organisms do not encounter oxygen in their natural environment and therefore do not need enzymes to detoxify reactive oxygen species like superoxide.
Obligate aerobes are bacteria that require oxygen to survive. These microbes rely on oxygen for their metabolism and cannot grow in the absence of oxygen. Some examples of obligate aerobes include Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Nocardia species.
Sporozoa is a species of obligate intracellular protozoan parasites. These are the causing agent of malaria in humans and animals, transmitted by female mosquitoes.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis is an obligate species in the family Mycobacterium and the causative agent of most cases of tuberculosis
a.Ficus (fig) trees and fig waspsb. Outcome of obligate mutualism
The Bacillus species are predominantly aerobic bacteria, meaning they require oxygen for growth and metabolism. Some species within the genus Bacillus can also perform anaerobic respiration in the absence of oxygen.
Aerobes that require oxygen to survive are known as obligate aerobes.
the condition in which one or both species in a mutualistic association are completely dependent on the presence of the other species.
The noun forms of the verb to obligate are obligator, obligatee, obligation, and the gerund, obligating.