It translates to fireberry in greek.
The common name for Pyrococcus abyssi is "deep-sea hydrothermal vent archaeon." It is a species of extremophilic archaea that thrives in high-temperature environments near deep-sea hydrothermal vents.
Segmented worms
The common name for a hippopotamus is "hippo."
The common name for Animalia is animals.
wow, really? your gonna ask the common name of omething when you put it in your question? the common name is spider, maybe you meant scientific, which would be Arachnid.
The common name for Pyrococcus furiosus is "extremophile archaeon." It is a species of microorganism known for its ability to thrive in extreme environments, such as high temperatures and acidic conditions.
Pyrococcus furiosus reproduces through a process called binary fission, where the cell divides into two daughter cells. This happens after the cell has grown to a certain size and duplicates its genetic material. Under optimal conditions, Pyrococcus furiosus can reproduce every 40 minutes.
Pyrococcus Furiosus and Halophile
By Eating Chinese food
Haloquadra walsbyi & Pyrococcus furiosus
The common name for Pyrococcus abyssi is "deep-sea hydrothermal vent archaeon." It is a species of extremophilic archaea that thrives in high-temperature environments near deep-sea hydrothermal vents.
Thermophiles (heat-loving bacteria)Halophiles (salt-loving bacteria)Methanogens (methane producing bacteria)
prokaryotes
1. Denaturation (separation of two strands of DNA by temperatures of around 94 to 98 degrees Celsius)2. Annealing (binding of DNA primer to the separated strands. Occurs at 50 to 65 degrees Celsius, which is lower than the optimal temperature of the DNA polymerases)3. Elongation (elongation of the strands using the DNA primer with heat-stable DNA polymerases, most frequently Taq (Thermus aquaticus) or Pfu (Pyrococcus furiosus) polymerases. Occurs at over 70 degrees Celsius)
The word "furious" doesn't come from Greek at all. It comes from the Latin word "furiosus" meaning "full of rage"
Strain 121 was discovered in 2003 by Derek Lovley and Kazem Kashefi (Science (vol 301, p 934)) It was isolated from a hydrothermal vent. It was the first microbe to be found to survive and reproduce the temperature used in an autoclave cycle. The bacteria grows best at 106oC with a doubling time of around and hour. Temperatures of 130oC are bacteriostatic rather than bacteriocidal.
The common name is horsetails.