Biology, asked by shreyavararn123, 9 months ago

An environment free from all types of microorganisms is called.......................... .​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
25

Answer:

Most microbes are unicellular and small enough that they require artificial magnification to be seen. However, there are some unicellular microbes that are visible to the naked eye, and some multicellular organisms that are microscopic. An object must measure about 100 micrometers (µm) to be visible without a microscope, but most microorganisms are many times smaller than that. For some perspective, consider that a typical animal cell measures roughly 10 µm across but is still microscopic. Bacterial cells are typically about 1 µm, and viruses can be 10 times smaller than bacteria (Figure 1). See Table 1 for units of length used in microbiology.

Answered by Anonymous
9

Microbes are tiny living things that are found all around us and are too small to be seen by the naked eye. They live in water, soil, and in the air. The human body is home to millions of these microbes too, also called microorganisms. ... There are also microbes called protozoa.❤

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