If you have limited time; I will go through the post.
"The bacteria are the smallest living creature in this world. They do the same things humans do with the setup they have. They use chemicle signal system to know about things, like the sex of another, and do things as 'aving it party or otherwise. So they are intelligent in their own way."
They cooperate with each other and feel altruism for others in the colony. No difference from us.
"If a food particle brushes against the cell, then a molecular chain reaction occurs to perform the task of enveloping the food particle to digest it."
Self explanatory.
Learning
When there is plenty food they put chemical signals to attract the piece of food to itself and replicate faster, so tht the replicates know about the food; or it can send chemical signals to others where the food is. wow the size of the particle of food and can I share it?
Then again when there is a food shortage they signal to eachother and secrete and harden a cell outside the colony, untill they feel there is a food supply.
Yep as usual the boffins want to replicate the same system the bacteria use to make a better computer. Wicked. i hope they solve it out before I die.
And then again I wrote a post here.
And a bit earlier when I was a bit younger I said this.
Drug-resistant germs found to help their brethren through the attack
This article made me feel wonderba. It is right into me little soul.
I will try to elucidate what the article says in a way I understood. You might see it different.
Confronting attack by antibiotics, some bacteria help each other out—and unfortunately for us, they’re better off for it, researchers have found.
It starts making my invicible hair on my knape go crazy. Felt like a bloody horse.
Normal wisdom according to the teory of evolution; some bacteria become super bugs, who are immune to the antibiotc, produce more and more superbugs and the other bacteria die out. that leaves the super bug in "evolution".
But now the boffins have found out otherwise.
But the new study, to appear in the Sept. 2 issue of the research journal Nature, indicates there are also population-wide changes in the bacterial community at work. Faced with an onslaught of antibiotics, resistant Escherichichia coli microbes produce—at an energy cost to themselves—a protein molecule that seeps into the communal broth and triggers a slew of protective mechanisms in their non-resistant neighbors.
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