Humidesulfovibrio idahonensis explained
Humidesulfovibrio idahonensis is a bacterium. It contains c-type cytochromes and reduces sulfate, sulfite, thiosulfate, elemental sulfur, DMSO, anthraquinone disulfonate and fumarate. The type strain is CY1T (=DSM 15450T =JCM 14124T).[1] Originally described under Desulfovibrio, it was reassigned to Humidesulfovibrio by Waite et al. in 2020.[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
- Sass. H.. Ramamoorthy. S.. Yarwood. C.. Langner. H.. Schumann. P.. Kroppenstedt. R.M.. Spring. S.. Rosenzweig. R. F.. Desulfovibrio idahonensis sp. nov., sulfate-reducing bacteria isolated from a metal(loid)-contaminated freshwater sediment. International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology. 59. 9. 2009. 2208–2214. 1466-5026. 10.1099/ijs.0.016709-0. 19605721. free.
- Web site: Species: Humidesulfovibrio idahonensis . 2024-04-29 . lpsn.dsmz.de . en.