Thermophilic bacteria have growth temperatures that range from 45C to 85C, with an optimum temperature of about 60C. Thermoduric organisms can survive at extreme temperatures, e.g. pasteurization, but cannot grow.
Thermophiles can grow at 55oC or higher, optimum often between 55 and 65oC. A few thermophile can grow at 90oC or above and some have maxima above 100oC. Procaryotes that have growth optim between 80oC and about 113oC are called hyperthermophiles. They usually do not grow well below 55oC.
Thermobacteriology is the relationship between heat and bacteria. For example: If you have leftovers from dinner it is best to heat the food up before eating. The heat will kill the bacteria, that could potentially be harmful to you.
The enzyme used in PCR to synthesize DNA is called DNA polymerase. The key difference is that the DNA polymerase used in PCR, such as Taq polymerase, is derived from a thermophilic bacterium called Thermus aquaticus and can withstand the high temperatures used in the PCR cycling process. This distinguishes it from the equivalent enzyme in our cells or most bacteria, which would be denatured by the high temperatures of PCR.
Bacteria are tiny living things. Some bacteria are good and some are not good. The difference between bacteria and a microbe, is a word used to describe tiny living things, which means that bacteria is a microbe, however, not all microbes are bacteria. A microbe can also be fungi, and protists, as well as bacteria.
Archaea and bacteria are both single-celled microorganisms, but they belong to separate domains of life. Archaea are known for their ability to thrive in extreme environments, such as hot springs or deep-sea vents, while bacteria can be found in a wide range of habitats. Additionally, archaea have unique cell membrane compositions and genetic codes that distinguish them from bacteria.
Thermophiles can grow at 55oC or higher, optimum often between 55 and 65oC. A few thermophile can grow at 90oC or above and some have maxima above 100oC. Procaryotes that have growth optim between 80oC and about 113oC are called hyperthermophiles. They usually do not grow well below 55oC.
the difference between bacteria and protoctist is that the protoctist have a necleus while the bacteria don't.... in other words the bacteria is a prokaryotes and the protoctist is a eukaryotes
bacterias have plasmids. but cyno-bacteria haven't plamids.
Whales are big and bacteria are small
bacteria is a prokaryote while algae is a eukaryote
There can be several impacts:Bacteria can be more active depending on what their optimal temperature isThe bacteria species can shift between thermophilc and non- thermophilic typesOxygen transfer and DO levels can change impacting bacteria qualityFloc settling can be impacted
Bacteria are not dependent on a host. :)
Main difference is Bacteria are prokaryotes.Yeasts are eukaryotes.
anemia,sicke cell anemia
They have different cell walls.
they are in different kingdoms
Only Bacteria can reproduce outside of a host.. Bacteria are made of cells