Bacteria range in size, but all are microscopic. They cannot be seen by the unaided, naked human eye. They are measured in micrometers; usually a decimal placed answer.... Many are super small
Bacteria are small organisms.
Bacteria can only be seen with the aid of a microscope, as they are typically very small and not visible to the naked eye. A compound light microscope or an electron microscope is commonly used to observe and study bacteria.
Mycoplasma genitalium is a type of bacteria. It is a small parasitic bacterium that lacks a cell wall.
Yes, most bacteria are too small to be seen with an ordinary light microscope. Bacteria are generally between 0.5 to 5 micrometers in size, which is below the resolution limit of a light microscope which is about 200 nanometers.
Like archaea, bacteria are also single-celled organisms without nuclei.
Bacteria are small organisms.
Certain small bacteria will in fact eat seaweed. These small bacteria will typically only eat seaweed that is dying or dead.
Bacteria , microorganism ,
Whales are big and bacteria are small
Variola is a virus called small pox and it is not a bacteria,
bacteria
hello
small crabs eat bacteria and lugworm
Bacteria are too small to see without a microscope. WAY too small.
no animal can eat bacteria cause they are too small
YES, it eats bacteria from the small intestine of flamingos
the size of your small intestine.