Archaea: Difference between revisions
Feedback

From WikiLectures

m (moved Archea to Archaea: error)
m (inserted article)
Line 1: Line 1:
<!----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*  INSERTED ARTICLE
*  Warning – this article is used in other articles where is inserted. If you are changing this article, you are changing other articles at the same moment. Please, be careful when you are editing it:
*    1. Do not remove commands <noinclude> </noinclude>. These command usually mark which are not used in other articles, where is this article used.
*    2. Do not change level of headings.
*    3. Great expansion or removing of the text of the article can change the meaning of other articles. You can discuss all these changes on discussion page of this article.
* All the articles, where is this article inserted can be found in ''Toolbox'' → ''What links here''.
*
* Please, do not remove this comment. If you are not sure, you can contact our [[WikiLectures:Editorial board | editorial board]].
*
* This warning note is automatically inserted by inserting the template {{subst:Inserted article}}.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->[[Category:Inserted articles]]
<noinclude>{{Dictionary
<noinclude>{{Dictionary
|eng=Archea
|eng=Archea

Revision as of 03:02, 11 August 2011


English: Archea
Latin: Archea
Dictionary


Structure

The phylogenetic tree
Achea: Thermococcus gammatolerans

Very similar to bacteria (in size, shape, absence of membrane bound organelles). Until 1990, they were considered an unusual group of bacteria and named archaebacteria. They were given their own domain since they have went through an independent evolution and have many differences in their biochemistry from other forms of life. Archaea reproduce asexually and divide by binary fission, fragmentation, or budding; in contrast to bacteria and eukaryotes, archaea do not form spores. Initially, archaea were seen as extremophiles that lived in harsh environments, such as hot springs and salt lakes, but they have since been isolated from various habitats including soils, oceans, and marshlands. One example are the methanogenic archaea that inhabit the gut of humans and ruminants, where they are present in vast numbers and aid in the digestion of food.

Function

Archaea are important in technology; methanogens are used to produce biogas and as part of sewage treatment, and enzymes from extremophile archaea that can resist high temperatures and organic solvents are exploited in biotechnology.


Links

Related articles

External links

Sources

References

Bibliography

Further reading