If all bacteria on earth died, we would also die because we have a lot of 'good' 'healthy' bacteria inside of us that keeps us alive. Bacteria couldn't just die anyway because so many new mutations develop every day
These Asian vermins have become white, black, yellow, and all species that they can replicate and so are the insects that are part of bacteria's retinue. The above answer was racist, meh idk.
because when the metiorite hit earth, all plants died, so the plant-eaters could not eat, then the carnivoirs that are left could not eat because all tye plant eaters died you see?
As some bacteria are harmful, there are some good things about bacteria in general. 1. If it weren't for bacteria, we wouldn't be here. All organisms on earth can trace their roots back to one group of organisms -primitive precambrian bacteria. If it weren't for those, complex life (like us) wouldn't be able to exist. 2. Bacteria aid in the digestive process. 3. Cheese, yogurt, and many other foods would not exist. 4. If it weren't for bacteria, the corpses would just pile up. Most bacteria are decomposers, meaning that they utilize dead or decaying matter for their food source. Without them, dead bodies would just sit there and not go away. There wouldn't be enough soil in the world to bury them all -in fact, without bacteria, there would be no soil -which takes us to our fifth positive aspect of bacteria. 5. Most people say that plants are the bottom of the food chain. The base of all life. They're wrong. In a terrestrial ecosystem, a plant would need soil for nutrients. Without bacteria, soil could not exist. In an aquatic ecosystem, such as an ocean, big fish need to eat little fish who prey on krill who eat plankton. Most people think it stops there. While some plankton are autotrophs (phytoplankton), the heterotrophic ones (zooplankton) find their metabolic sustenance from dead matter or -you guessed it- bacteria.
There are six Kingdoms: Animalia, Archaea, Bacteria, Fungi, Plantae, and Protista.
The word "Pangea" means all earth.
Bacteria CAN live on Earth.
Because certain bacteria live in our digestive tract and digest things for us. If we killed all bacteria, we'd starve. Plus bacteria are the base of the food chain. They also break down organic material from things that have died. Without bacteria, nothing would rot and return to the soil. Bacteria are actually vital to life on Earth.
true
Bacteria is a plural form of the word "bacterium". Bacteria are single celled organisms that are ubiquitous is all of the environments on Earth.
All living things would die
As of now, the smallest bacteria on Earth are those belonging to Mycoplasma.
all i know is that Wilbur wright died of it in 1914 i beleive
the amount of bacteria on Earth would have to be at least over 100.
They all died out..
bacteria
Biology is the study of life and earth science is the study of the earth.
i dont know you do the math ;)