Desulfomonile limimaris explained
Desulfomonile limimaris is a bacterium.[1] It is an anaerobic dehalogenating bacterium first isolated from marine sediments. Its cells are large, Gram-negative rods with a collar girdling each cell, like Desulfomonile tiedjei. The type strain is DCB-MT (= ATCC 700979T).
Further reading
- Neilson, Alasdair H., and Ann-Sofie Allard. Organic Chemicals in the Environment: Mechanisms of Degradation and Transformation. CRC Press, 2012.
- Book: Staley, James T. . Garrity, George M. . Boone, David R. . Castenholz, Richard W. . Don J. Brenner . Krieg, Noel R. . Bergey's manual of systematic bacteriology . Springer . Berlin . 2001 . 0-387-24145-0 . registration .
- Book: Jared R. Leadbetter . Environmental microbiology . Elsevier Academic Press . Amsterdam . 2005 . 0-12-182802-6 .
- Twardowska, Irena, et al., eds. Viable methods of soil and water pollution monitoring, protection and remediation. Vol. 69. Springer, 2006.
External links
Notes and References
- Sun B, Cole JR, Tiedje JM . Desulfomonile limimaris sp. nov., an anaerobic dehalogenating bacterium from marine sediments . . 51 . Pt 2 . 365–71 . March 2001 . 11321081 . 10.1099/00207713-51-2-365. 2013-07-25.