Archea: Difference between revisions

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&nbsp;Archea are unicellular microorganisms<sup>[1]</sup>. They do not have nucleus or any other&nbsp;organelles. They were classified as a strange group of bacteria and were called&nbsp;archaebacteria. However, later, it was found that archea have their own&nbsp;evolutionary history&nbsp;and manifest numerous differences in their biochemistry from other forms of life, therefore they are&nbsp;classified as a separate domain in the three-domain system<sup>[1]</sup>.
&nbsp;Archea are unicellular microorganisms<ref>[1]</ref>. They do not have nucleus or any other&nbsp;organelles. They were classified as a strange group of bacteria and were called&nbsp;archaebacteria. However, later, it was found that archea have their own&nbsp;evolutionary history&nbsp;and manifest numerous differences in their biochemistry from other forms of life, therefore they are&nbsp;classified as a separate domain in the three-domain system<ref>[1]</ref>.  
 
 


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= <u>'''References:'''</u>  =


1.[http://eol.org/info/457 eol.org/info/457]


 
2.[http://eol.org/info/457 eol.org/info/457]
 
= <u>'''References:'''</u>  =
 
1.[http://eol.org/info/457 eol.org/info/457]

Revision as of 11:42, 23 October 2018

 Archea are unicellular microorganisms[1]. They do not have nucleus or any other organelles. They were classified as a strange group of bacteria and were called archaebacteria. However, later, it was found that archea have their own evolutionary history and manifest numerous differences in their biochemistry from other forms of life, therefore they are classified as a separate domain in the three-domain system[2].







References:

1.eol.org/info/457

2.eol.org/info/457

  1. [1]
  2. [1]