Sporosarcina globispora explained
Sporosarcina globispora, formerly known as Bacillus globisporus, is a Gram-positive, aerobic, round spore-forming bacillus. Strains of this species were originally described in 1967 and were found to be fairly similar to the species Bacillus pantothenticus.[1] The species was later reassigned to the genus Sporosarcina along with the species Bacillus psychrophilus and Bacillus pasteurii.[2]
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Notes and References
- Larkin. JM. Stokes, JL . Taxonomy of psychrophilic strains of Bacillus.. Journal of Bacteriology. Oct 1967. 94. 4. 889–95. 6051360. 276750.
- Yoon. JH. Lee, KC . Weiss, N . Kho, YH . Kang, KH . Park, YH . Sporosarcina aquimarina sp. nov., a bacterium isolated from seawater in Korea, and transfer of Bacillus globisporus (Larkin and Stokes 1967), Bacillus psychrophilus (Nakamura 1984) and Bacillus pasteurii (Chester 1898) to the genus Sporosarcina as Sporosarcina globispora comb. nov., Sporosarcina psychrophila comb. nov. and Sporosarcina pasteurii comb. nov., and emended description of th.. International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology. May 2001. 51. Pt 3. 1079–86. 11411676 . 10.1099/00207713-51-3-1079.