Organisms in the domain Archaea can live in extreme conditions such as high temperatures, acidic environments, and high salt concentrations. These extremophiles have unique adaptations that allow them to thrive in harsh environments where other life forms may not survive.
Extreme prokaryotic cells are found in extreme environments such as hot springs, deep-sea hydrothermal vents, and highly acidic or alkaline environments. They are a diverse group of microorganisms that have adapted to survive in these harsh conditions, often exhibiting unique biochemical and metabolic capabilities.
Prokaryotes that live in extreme environments are in the domain "archaea."
The word you are looking for is "archaea." Archaea are a group of single-celled microorganisms that can thrive in extreme environments such as high temperatures, acidic conditions, or high salinity.
Firstly, archae are not a kingdom but a domain. A domain comes before kingdoms in the taxonomic classification system 3 domains are Eukaryae, Prokaryae and Archae. As you can see from their names, the domain Eukaryae is eukaryotic and the domain Prokaryae is prokaryotic. Archae are different. They are bacteria which live in extreme conditions such as extremely high temperatures, with little oxygen or water, etc. Archae are neither prokaryotic or eukaryotic.
Yes, some species of archaebacteria can thrive in extreme environments like volcanoes where the conditions are hot and acidic. These types of archaebacteria are known as extremophiles and have unique adaptations that allow them to survive in such harsh conditions.
Archea Bacteria are a domain of organisms that live in extreme environments.
All life belongs to one of 3 domains: archaea, eukaryota, or bacteria. The archaea resemble true bacteria in shape but live in extreme conditions such as excessively hot, salty or acid. They differ genetically by possessing introns while true bacteria do not.
Organisms that live in extreme environments are often found in domains Archaea and Bacteria. These extremophiles thrive in conditions such as high temperatures, acidic environments, high salinity, or high pressure, where most other organisms cannot survive.
The domain that contains the most primitive bacteria found in extreme environments is the domain Archaea. Archaea are known for thriving in harsh conditions such as high temperatures, acidity, or salt concentrations, making them well-adapted to extreme environments.
It is called a exteremophile.
Extreme prokaryotic cells are found in extreme environments such as hot springs, deep-sea hydrothermal vents, and highly acidic or alkaline environments. They are a diverse group of microorganisms that have adapted to survive in these harsh conditions, often exhibiting unique biochemical and metabolic capabilities.
Prokaryotes that live in extreme environments are in the domain "archaea."
Extreme cold. Typically the Arctic and Antarctic oceans.
Extreme cold: the maximum temperature is 165 K!
Yes they do. They are usually adapted to horrid extreme conditions like ocean vents.
Archaea are a distinct domain of single-celled microorganisms that are separate from bacteria and eukaryotes. They are known for living in extreme environments such as hot springs, salt flats, and deep-sea hydrothermal vents.
Extremophiles, such as thermophiles that thrive in high temperatures, halophiles that thrive in high-salt environments, and acidophiles that thrive in acidic conditions, are examples of prokaryotes that can live in extreme environments where other organisms cannot survive.