No they live in harsh conditions so they won't always be needing oxygen.
yes they do need oxygen to live.
:)
No.
no way
I don't know, but i need to know as well.I Know One of them is archaebacteria
Eubacteria, Archaebacteria, Protista, and Fungi
Archaebacteria
Every cell in your body needs oxygen.
Oxygen is important to the society because without it, we could not live. we need Oxygen for us humans to live, for the animals and environment. that is the most important point as to why we need Oxygen. we also use Oxygen for hospitals, burning things like paper, and more. Oxygen is something we have to live with as it is what we survive on.
a characteristic of archaebacteria are that they live in environments without oxygen
The archaebacteria are the only anaerobic species, who do not tolerate free oxygen.
The archaebacteria are the only anaerobic species, who do not tolerate free oxygen.
Most archaebacteria need to have air and water to survive. Some archaebacteria don't need air only sunlight to survive.
methanogens
Yes because you have to put a pickle in a peach
Archaebacteria
from there parents
Archaebacteria are simple organisms that thrive well in the heat of thermal vents deep in the ocean.
After the discovery of archaebacteria, it was decided that archaebacteria and eubacteria have too many different characteristics that they need their own domains.
Archaebacteria are unicellular prokaryotes that are the oldest living organisms on Earth. Some characteristics include survival in oxygen-free environments, being extremophiles and reproduction is asexual.
Pretty much all organisms need oxygen or sunlight to live, I know trees do not need oxygen to live, and deep sea creatures like the giant tube worm does not need sunlight. ^^^The idiocy of this post almost gave me autism^^^ The real answer is yes most organisms need oxygen and or sunlight to live, but Archaebacteria do not need either. they oxidize sulfur and other easily oxidized materials to obtain energy.