Both the rickettsia and chlamydiae are obligate intracellular parasites.
Chlamydiae are obligate intracellular bacteria that parasitize host cells for nutrients. They rely on the host cell's resources to multiply and survive, as they lack the metabolic machinery to produce their own nutrients.
Rickettsiae and Chlamydia were once thought to be viruses due to their small size and intracellular lifestyle, but they are actually classified as bacteria. They are both obligate intracellular pathogens that require host cells to multiply.
Chlamydiae are a phylum of bacteria that are obligate intracellular parasites. One of these is Chlamydia trachomatis, which causes the STD chlamydia (See related question "What is chlamydia?" for information on the STD.) Bacteria in the chlamydia family that causes disease include C. trachomatis, C. psittaci, and C. pneumonia. There are other chlamdyia species that cause diseases in other animals, as well as species that cause no illness.
The phylum chlamydiae includes these species that cause human disease:Chlamydia trachomatis can cause the STD known as chlamydia, as well as endemic trachoma.Chlamydia pneumoniae causes some cases of pneumonia.Chlamydia psittaci causes psittacosis.
How does what differ from mass?
No, rickettsiae are transmitted by arthropods and can cause typhus and Rocky Mountain fever.
The chlamydiae are bacteria, not viruses.
Helminths are not considered to be microorganisms. They are multicellular parasitic worms that are larger in size compared to bacteria, fungi, and rickettsiae which are microorganisms.
The phylum of chlamydia is Chlamydiae
chlamydiae spirogaya yeast
Chlamydia trachomatis is in the class Chlamydiae
Chlamydiae are obligate intracellular bacteria that parasitize host cells for nutrients. They rely on the host cell's resources to multiply and survive, as they lack the metabolic machinery to produce their own nutrients.
I believe it can if you have a chlamydiae infection.
No, rickettsias require an arthropod for transmission, but not chlamydias.
Rickettsiae and Chlamydia were once thought to be viruses due to their small size and intracellular lifestyle, but they are actually classified as bacteria. They are both obligate intracellular pathogens that require host cells to multiply.
Rickettsiae bacteria carry yphus, rickettsialpox, Boutonneuse fever, African tick bite fever, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, Flinders Island spotted fever and Queensland tick typhus (Australian tick typhus).
Chlamydiae reproduce by binary fission, producing two offspring.