Bacteria and viruses can breed.
i.e.
When bacteria breeds, they form large colonies visible to the naked eye
When viruses breed, they become more deadly or mutate but are still virtually invisible to the naked eye.
No, a virus is much smaller than bacteria.
bacteria size ranges in micrometer i.e. 10-6m virus size ranges in nanometer i.e. 10-9m
Bacteria is typically smaller than Eukaryotes. In fact, Eukaryotes have an organelle called the mitochondria which resemble an enveloped bacteria.
2 is smaller than 3, so 2mm is smaller than 3mm.
AIDS is a disease caused by the HIV virus. This is different than a bacteria.
No, a virus is much smaller than bacteria.
Viruses are always smaller than bacteria.
yes a virus is way smaller
A virus is typically the smallest of these three biological entities, as it is much smaller than bacteria and fungi. Viruses are even smaller than the smallest bacteria and fungi, and can only replicate inside the cells of a living host organism.
Yes, viruses are smaller than bacteria.
bacteria size ranges in micrometer i.e. 10-6m virus size ranges in nanometer i.e. 10-9m
Yes, bacteria are generally larger than viruses.
there are some bacteria that approach the size of larger viruses but, viruses are smaller than bacteria
Red blood cell
No. It is thousands of times smaller.
No.Virus particles are slightly smaller than a cell.
Yes they only get as large as the smallest bacteria.