Domain Bacteria

Characteristics of bacteria


Domain Bacteria includes the prokaryotes people encounter on an everyday basis.
  • Most bacterial species are heterotrophic; that is, they acquire their food from organic matter.
  • The largest number of bacteria are saprobic, meaning that they feed on dead or decaying organic matter.
  • A few bacterial species are parasitic; these bacteria live within host organisms and cause disease.

  • Certain bacteria are autotrophic, meaning they synthesize their own foods. Such bacteria engage in the process of photosynthesis.
  • They use pigments dissolved in their cytoplasm for the photosynthetic reactions .
  • Two groups of photosynthetic bacteria are the green sulfur bacteria and the purple bacteria.
  • The pigments in these bacteria resemble plant pigments. Some autotrophic bacteria are chemosynthetic.
  • These bacteria use chemical reactions as a source of energy, and synthesize their own foods using this energy.
  • Bacteria may live at a variety of temperatures.
  • Bacteria living at very cold temperatures are psychrophilic, those living at human body temperatures are mesophilic, and those living at very high temperatures are thermophilic.
  • Bacteria that require oxygen for their metabolism are referred to as aerobic, while species that thrive in an oxygen-free environment are said to be anaerobic.
  • Some bacteria can live with
    or without oxygen; they are described as facultative.
  • Most bacterial species live in a neutral pH environment (pH 7), but some bacteria can live in acidic environments (such as in yogurt and sour cream), and others can live in alkaline environments.
  • Certain bacteria are known to live at the pH of 2 found in the human stomach.

    Activities of bacteria

  • Bacteria play many beneficial roles in the environment. For example, some species of bacteria live on the roots of pod-bearing plants (legumes) and “fix” nitrogen from the air into organic compounds that are then available to plants.
  • The plants use the nitrogen compounds to make amino acids and proteins, providing them to the animals that consume them.
  • Other bacteria are responsible for the decay that occurs in landfills and other debris in the environment. These bacteria recycle the essential elements in the organic matter.
  • In the food industry, bacteria are used to prepare products such as cheeses, fermented dairy products, sauerkraut, and pickles.
  • In other industries, bacteria are used to produce antibiotics, chemicals, dyes, numerous vitamins and enzymes, and a number of insecticides.
  • Today, they are used in genetic engineering to synthesize certain pharmaceutical products that cannot be produced otherwise.

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