Archaebacteria - page 4

What do archeabacteria eat?
Archaea can eat iron, sulfur, carbon dioxide, hydrogen, ammonia, uranium, and all sorts of toxic compounds, and from this consumption they can produce...
What are some examples of archebacteria?
What are three examples of archaebacteria?What is a common example of archaebacteria?What organisms are Archaea?Is E coli an archaea?What are Archaeb...
What are some animals that are archebacteria?
Examples include:Acidilobus saccharovorans.Aeropyrum pernix.Desulfurococcus kamchatkensis.Hyperthermus butylicus.Igniococcus hospitalis.Ignisphaera ag...
Do archeabacteria move independently?
Archaebacteria are prokaryotic. They can move independently, either with flagella or cilia. What do archaebacteria use for movement?What are 3 charact...
What do archaebacteria do for us?
Archaea can also generate energy differently and have unique ecological roles to play, such as being responsible for producing biological methane—some...
How do you archaebacteria move?
Flagella. As with bacteria, flagella allow the archaea to move. Their structure and operating mechanism are similar in archaea and bacteria, but how t...