Biology, asked by sahilkhan9129, 1 year ago

what is archaebacteri​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

Archaebacteria is a kingdom in Carl Woese's six kingdom classification. It's members find place under the kingdom Monera of Whittaker's Five Kingdom Classification. It consists mainly of unicellular prokaryotes, some of which are now extinct. It differs from the kingdom Eubacteria by the presence of pseudomurein instead of murein (peptidoglycan).

Answered by salusuju
1

Answer:

These bacteria are special since they live in some of the most harsh habitats such as extreme salty areas ( halophiles) , hot springs ( thermoacidophiles) and marshy areas ( methanogens) .

Explanation:

Archaebacteria differ from other bacteria in having a different cell wall structure and this feature is responsible for their survival in extreme conditions. Methanogens are present in guts of several ruminants animals such as cows and buffaloes and they are respnosible for the production of methane gas( biogas) from dung of these animals

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