Bacillus horti explained
Bacillus horti is a species of Gram-negative alkaliphilic bacillus. Its cells are strictly aerobic rods that produce subterminally located ellipsoidal spores. Its type strain is K13T (= JCM 9943T).[1]
Further reading
- Berkeley, Roger, et al., eds. Applications and systematics of bacillus and relatives. John Wiley & Sons, 2008.
- Logan, Niall A., and Paul De Vos. "Bacillus." Bergey's manual of systematic bacteriology 3 (2009): 21–128.
- Mielenz, Jonathan R., et al. Biotechnology for Fuels and Chemicals: The Twenty-Eighth Symposium. Vol. 136. Springer, 2009.
- Ivanova, Elena P., et al. "Characterization of Bacillus strains of marine origin."International microbiology 2.4 (2010): 267–271.
External links
Notes and References
- Yumoto. I.. Yamazaki. K.. Sawabe. T.. Nakano. K.. Kawasaki. K.. Ezura. Y.. Shinano. H.. Bacillus horti sp. nov., a new Gram-negative alkaliphilic bacillus. International Journal of Systematic Bacteriology. 48. 2. 1998. 565–571. 0020-7713. 10.1099/00207713-48-2-565. 9731298. free.