Archaebacteria can generally survive in much more extreme conditions, such as extreme heat, salty, pH, etc. environments. Those "other" bacteria will generally survive only within an optimal range of temperature, etc.
1 Archaebacteria- prokaryotes, Ancient Bacteria, have hard cell wall, live in harsh environments 2 Eubacteria-Prokaryotes, Don't live in harsh places, similar to archaebacteria 3Protista- eukaryote, unicellular ,slime molds, algae, amoeba 4Fungi- heterotrophs, multicellular, mushrooms, mold 5plants 6 Animals
Peptidoglycan is absent in the cell wall of archaebacteria. Instead, they have a unique structure composed of different molecules such as pseudopeptidoglycan or glycoproteins. This structural difference is one of the features that distinguishes archaebacteria from other types of bacteria.
Methanogenic Archaebacteria is found in swamps.
No, archaebacteria have simple cells lacking membrane-bound organelles found in eukaryotic cells. They are prokaryotic organisms with a simpler internal structure.
Archaebacteria
They are in the archaebacteria kingdom
Blue green algae and archaebacteria
Protist is a unicellular eukaryote, whereas algae can be unicellular or multicellular. Bacteria and archaebacteria are both prokaryotes and are typically unicellular organisms.
Mold is a part of the kingdom fungi. The kingdom archaebacteria has bacteria and algae, but does not contain any fungi.
Archaebacteria, now known as Archaea, are a type of single-celled microorganism that can thrive in extreme environments. They have unique molecular characteristics that differentiate them from both bacteria and eukaryotes.
There are six kingdoms of scientific classification: Plantae, Animalia, Archaebacteria, Protista, Eubacteria and Fungi. Algae belong to the Kingdom Protista.
Archaebacteria obtain their energy through various metabolic processes, including chemosynthesis, where they obtain energy from sources such as hydrogen gas, sulfur, or iron. Some archaebacteria are also able to perform photosynthesis using different pigments than plants and algae.
The common name for the Archaebacteria kingdom is archaea.
Algae or blue green algae
Other than the organisms that fall under the kingdoms of animals and plants, living organism fall under the categories of Fungi, Protists, Eubacteria (Monera), and Archaebacteria. Examples from these kingdoms are: Fungi: mold Protists: algae Eubacteria (Monera): E. Coli Archaebacteria: Halophiles
one kind of archaebacteria is the methanogens
Yes, archaebacteria have a cell wall.