It seems there may be a typo in your question. Did you mean "bacterium"? If so, bacterium is a singular form of bacteria, which are microscopic single-celled organisms that can be found in various environments and play important roles in nature, including in the human body for processes like digestion.
Yes. Bacterium is the (not very often used) singular form of "bacteria."
Bacillus Cereus lives in food for the most part. An example would be rice, but its not only rice. Cooked cereals and potatoes can carry this bacteria too including any food with sauces. Even salads are found to be harboring bacteria! Yucky.
The plural of bacterium is bacteria.
Yes. Bacterium is the (not very often used) singular form of "bacteria."
Mold affects it because the surface of the cheesy object will be therefore unedible which means the consumer will be cricially ill, it only will put baterium in the chessy product and affect the comsumer!
You would use a scanning electron microscope (SEM) to observe the surface features of a bacterium. SEM provides high-resolution images of the specimen's surface by scanning it with a focused beam of electrons. This allows for detailed visualization of the bacterium's structure at a nanoscale level.
Simply put, DNA is the genetic material, not protein. At that time no one was quite sure which was which. A clever experiment by Hersey and Chase settled this question. Google that experiment.
Assuming you really meant to ask about haemolytic STREP (excuse my spelling but I'm English)Haemolytic STREP is a baterium of the Streptococcus group of organisms. These are small spherical shaped bacteria (cocci) and the haemolytic variety produce a toxin which destroys the cell wall of red blood cells, releasing the haemoglobin they contain into the surrounding medium. This bug commonly causes sore throats, can cause an infection of the heart (endocarditis) which can lead to damage of the valves in the heart if not treated with antibiotics quickly, often a complication of scarlet fever, and a number of other infectious conditions. Usually easily treated if this is diagnosed quickly and treatment started early enough.
Bacillus Cereus lives in food for the most part. An example would be rice, but its not only rice. Cooked cereals and potatoes can carry this bacteria too including any food with sauces. Even salads are found to be harboring bacteria! Yucky.
For self-protection:Good work glovesface mask in case it is windy outside AND to keep your hands away from your moutha handkerchief to tie around your hair, to cover hairgoggles to keep hands away from rubbing your eyesbottled water that you can throw out latera way to wash up afterwardsIf something gets on your gloves (even if you can't see "it"), you can transfer "it" to your skin, mouth, face, eyes.For job sites:sturdy, strong trash bagsa flat shovela broomstrudy cardboard, to make a funnel to insert into garbage bagMisc.a sturdy stomach if picking up food garbagea strong back for the workknowledge of good body mechanics-- i.e. bend at knees, not from waistgood sturdy shoes, for comfort and supportold clothing or work jumpsuit, coveralls - zip up or snap up the front is easiestBe aware that even if you are picking up road debris in front of your own house, you *can* come across nasty stuff that other people dropped or threw, including but not limited to:drinking bottles (risk: saliva as body fluids)used condoms (risk: body fluids)used tampons or pads (risk: bloody body fluids)used tissues (risk: respiratory body fluids)Human feces or urineAnimal feces or urineetc.ALL of these may contain viruses or baterium and can spread illness