Billy is a kind Archaebacteria who will go out of his way to help old ladies across the street.
thermophiles
The types of archaebacteria which live in hot springs and boiling deep ocean vents are thermophiles.
The Archaebacteria that live in hot springs and boiling deep ocean vents are typically members of the thermophilic and hyperthermophilic groups. These extremophiles are specially adapted to thrive in extremely high temperatures, with some capable of surviving in temperatures over 100°C. Examples of these Archaebacteria include Thermococcus, Pyrococcus, and Methanocaldococcus.
Yes they do. They are usually adapted to horrid extreme conditions like ocean vents.
Archaebacteria are a type of single-celled microorganism that can live in extreme environments such as hot springs, salt flats, and deep-sea hydrothermal vents. They can feed on a variety of substances, including organic compounds and even hydrogen gas. Some species of archaebacteria are capable of producing methane gas as a byproduct of their metabolism.
Archaebacteria are simple organisms that thrive well in the heat of thermal vents deep in the ocean.
Some archaebacteria, such as thermophiles, live by hydrothermal vents. They are chemoautotrophs, which means that they produce their own food using energy from the chemicals in the vents instead of using energy from the sun. The energy starts in the vent, then goes to the archaebacteria, then to the organisms that eat those archaebacteria, and so on.
Hydrothermal power requires a suitable hot spring.
archaebacteria can be found in any extreme environment ex: Places without sunlight, volcanic craters, on mountain peaks, deep sea/ocean vents, or even in the organs of animals
Archaebacteria are actually not animals. Animals are multicellular organisms comprised of eukaryotic cells (having a nucleus). Archaebacteria are single celled prokaryotes. They are not considered bacteria and are considered a separate domain in the three domain system (the other two are bacteria and eukarya).Archaebacteria tend to live in extreme environments. One example is methanopyrus kandleri which can live at temperatures above 100 degrees celsius (above the boiling temperature of water) and was discovered living in sea vents on the ocean floor. Another example is methanobrevibacter smithii which is found in the human digestive system.
hostile environments such a salty brines, boiling springs, ocean thermal vents. see methanogens, they are also archaeobacteria
If you've ever been to Yellowstone national park in Utah, you've seen Archaebacteria, mostly in the boiling water and mud-pots. They enjoy (by which I mean survive) extremely hot, sulfuric, moist areas.