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Relatively little is known about many obligate anaerobes. Why might this be so? A. The obligate aerobes are far more numerous, and also far more interesting. B. It's much harder to provide the right atmospheric environment to cultivate obligate anaerobes, so it's been harder to study them. C. Only obligate aerobes cause disease, so we've had little reason to study obligate anaerobes. D. The majority of obligate anaerobes are very nutritionally fastidious, which has slowed their study.

User The Hutt
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Answer:

B. It's much harder to provide the right atmospheric environment to cultivate obligate anaerobes, so it's been harder to study them.

Step-by-step explanation:

Obligate anaerobic bacteria are the ones that can grow only in the absence of oxygen. These bacteria do not derive the energy from aerobic cellular respiration and die when exposed to the presence of oxygen.

Owing to their oxygen sensitivity, the culturing of obligate anaerobic bacteria requires special equipment to ensure the absence of oxygen.

The presence of aerobic conditions in laboratories makes their culture and study harder than that of the aerobic or facultative anaerobic bacteria.

User Lsavio
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