Bar soap would contain more bacterium as it is usually handled by more than one person. Liquid soap is not handled at all.
Yes, bacteria can live on a sponge, towel or dish cloth and transfer from dish to dish.
Yes, so long as there is sufficient nutrients bacteria can grow pretty much anywhere. Pseudomonas spp. are particularly notorious for growing in chlorhexidine surgical scrub soap.
yes
The live R bacteria acquired a capsule and became live, virulent S bacteria.
just sponges, animals without vertebrae, but other animals do use the sponge bed to live in and off of.
bacteria can live on its own and it is considered as a animal.
I be live one of the most uncommon omnivore in the intertidal zone is a sponge
Yes, bacteria live in school bathrooms! Bacteria live on your skin, in your saliva, and in your feces. Bacteria can live for short periods of time on objects, which is medically called fomites (any objects or substances capable of carrying infectious organisms). So a wet cleaning rag or a cleaning sponge can be a fomite that harbors bacteria and lets them multiply.
All sponges are aerobic, they need oxygen to live. Some do however, live in low oxygen environments and they can 'house' anaerobic bacteria.
They live underwater.smart one...
Underwater
What is a purple tube sponge what are you on?
they live in the sea
Sponges do live in the ocean.
Sponge bob lives under the sea so a Maltese sponge must live in Maltese sea.
Bacteria CAN live on Earth.
The red beard sponge can befound in the Caribbean.
Sponge bob lives under the sea so a Maltese sponge must live in Maltese sea.
Yes; if you were to place a sponge in the blender the individual sponge cells are capable of living independently.