Science, asked by AVEENAUB, 6 months ago

differences between aerobic bacteria and anaerobic bacteria.​

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Answered by water12
5

Answer:

bacteria are single celled microbes without a nucleus. Anaerobic bacteria make ATP without oxygen. ... Aerobic bacteria use oxygen and glucose to make 36-38 ATP and carbon dioxide. They do these through three steps, glycolysis, the citric acid cycle, and oxidative phosphorylation, where oxygen is used.

Answered by Alina1076
3

Answer:

There are two types of organisms and tiny single-celled bacteria called aerobic and anaerobic bacteria in the human body. Aerobics are able to use oxygen, whereas anaerobic bacteria can sustain itself without the presence of oxygen. Aerobic bacteria can detoxify oxygen, whereas anaerobic bacteria cannot sufficiently break down food molecules as much as aerobic bacteria.

Aerobic bacteria gets energy from food when compared to anaerobic, that can survive in places where there is less oxygen, such as human guts. Some anaerobic bacteria also causes diseases in those areas of the human body where there is less oxygen supplied. Aerobic bacteria cannot grow without an ample supply of oxygen involved in a chemical reaction, whereas the anaerobic term does not imply this.

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