very carefully
Bacteria can produce carbon monoxide through the breakdown of organic compounds, such as sugars, in a process called fermentation. This fermentation process can release carbon monoxide as a byproduct.
Bacteria eat dead organic matter and release trapped carbon atoms as CO2.
No, Carbon Dioxide is a gas that is toxic to the human body because it attaches to your hemoglobin where oxygen would normally attach, therefore no oxygen reaches your cells and they begin to die. This is called Carboxyhemoglobin.
Carbon itself is not used to kill bacteria, but certain carbon-based materials, such as activated carbon, can adsorb bacteria and other contaminants from water and air. Additionally, some carbon compounds, like carbon nanotubes and graphene, have demonstrated antimicrobial properties in research settings. However, the primary role of carbon in these contexts is often related to filtration or enhancing the effectiveness of other antimicrobial agents rather than direct bacterial killing.
Release of CO2.
Carbon Dioxside
oxygen and carbon in the air
capnophile bacteria like Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans found in the mouth which causes juevenile periodintitis. Capnophile - meaning that it lives off of low amounts of oxygen and high amounts of carbon dioxide.
yes because the bacteria can not get rid of the carbon diokide
Bacteria eat dead organic matter and release trapped carbon atoms as CO2.
Yes, soil bacteria release carbon dioxide into the environment through the process of respiration.
Photosynthetic bacteria require CO2 for making food in the form of starch through photosynthesis and this CO2 or carbon dioxide is produced as a result of the carbon cycle.
Bacteria decomposes organisms that have died. This is important because when bacteria decomposes the organism, therefore we have carbon dioxide. If we didn't have carbon dioxide, then we wouldn't have photosynthesis, therefore we wouldn't have plants.
No many prokaryotic cells can use inorganic chemical compounds (S and Fe) in chemosynthetic processes to fix Carbon into organic molecules - Some chemosynthetic prokaryotes are Archaeans and some are in the Domain Bacteria
carbon from CO2.
Bacteria can produce carbon monoxide through the breakdown of organic compounds, such as sugars, in a process called fermentation. This fermentation process can release carbon monoxide as a byproduct.
Bacteria eat dead organic matter and release trapped carbon atoms as CO2.