Extremophile Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
An extremophile is an organism, usually unicellular, which thrives in or requires "extreme" conditions. The definition of "extreme" is anthropocentric, of course. To the organism itself its environment is completely normal. Non-extremophilic organisms are called mesophiles.Many extremophiles are members of the Archaea family, and indeed the terms are occasionally used interchangeably even though there are many mesophilic archaea as well as many extremophilic bacteria and eukarya. Not all extremophiles are unicellular. Examples of extremophilic metazoa are the psychrophilic Grylloblattodea (insects) and antarctic krill (crustaceans).
There are many different classes of extremophiles, each corresponding to a the way its environments differs from what is considered normal. These classifications are not exclusive. Many extremophiles fall under multiple categories. For example, organisms living inside hot rocks deep under Earth's surface are both thermophilic and barophilic.
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