Halodesulfovibrio marinisediminis explained
Halodesulfovibrio marinisediminis is a sulfate-reducing bacterium. Its cells are vibrio-shaped, Gram-negative, motile rods (0.7-1.0 micrometres wide and 1.0-3.5 micrometres long) with single polar flagella. The type strain is C/L2(T) (=NBRC [corrected] 101113(T) =JCM 14577(T) =DSM 17456(T)).[1]
Originally described under Desulfovibrio, it was reassigned to Halodesulfovibrio by Cao et al. in 2016.[2]
Further reading
- Staley, James T., et al. "Bergey's manual of systematic bacteriology, vol. 3."Williams and Wilkins, Baltimore, MD (1989): 2250–2251. *Bélaich, Jean-Pierre, Mireille Bruschi, and Jean-Louis Garcia, eds. Microbiology and biochemistry of strict Anaerobes Involved in interspecies hydrogen transfer. No. 54. Springer, 1990.
External links
Notes and References
- Takii S, Hanada S, Hase Y . Desulfovibrio marinisediminis sp. nov., a novel sulfate-reducing bacterium isolated from coastal marine sediment via enrichment with Casamino acids . . 58 . Pt 10 . 2433–8 . October 2008 . 18842870 . 10.1099/ijs.0.65750-0 . etal . free .
- Web site: Species: Halodesulfovibrio marinisediminis . 2024-04-29 . lpsn.dsmz.de . en.