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Volume 19,
Issue 4,
1969
Volume 19, Issue 4, 1969
- Articles
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Proposal to reject the genus Hydrogenomonas: Taxonomic implications
More LessABSTRACTFifty-six strains of “hydrogen bacteria” and related nonautotrophic bacteria, including nearly all existing named Hydrogenomonas spp., have been compared. It is proposed that the genus Hydrogenomonas should be rejected, since its type species H. pantotropha, appears to be a nomen dubium; and that the various species of “hydrogen bacteria” should be assigned to other genera, not specifically characterized by the ability to grow autotrophically with H2.
The two species of hydrogen bacteria most frequently isolated by enrichment show a peritrichous or degenerate peritrichous flagellar arrangement; one is nonpigmented, the other produces yellow (carotenoid) cellular pigments. Of the various possible generic assignments for these two species, assignment to the genus Alcaligenes is proposed. The nonpigmented species, previously named Hydrogenomonas eutropha, but never legitimately described, is here described as A. eutrophus. The yellow species which includes both facultatively autotrophic and nonautotrophic strains, is described as a new species, A. paradoxus. The Gram-negative, coccoid hydrogen bacterium, formerly known as Micrococcus denitrificans, is placed in a new genus, Paracoccus. The polarly flagellated species of hydrogen bacteria, including the previously named species Hydrogenomonas facilis, H. flava, H. ruhlandii and Pseudomonassa saccharophila, are all assigned to the genus Pseudomonas.
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Cooperative description of type cultures of Streptomyces. IV. Species descriptions from the second, third and fourth studies **
More LessABSTRACTThe International Streptomyces Project is a cooperative effort by more than 40 collaborating laboratories representing 18 nations to assemble and redescribe authentic type strains or acceptable neotype strains for species of the genera Streptomyces and Streptoverticillium. Descripktions based upon currently acceptable criteria and methods are published in the International Journal of Systematic Bacteriology. Specimens of the redescribed type strains are deposited in the American Type Culture Collection, the Centraalbureau voor Schimmelcultures, the U. S. S. R. Research Institute for Antibiotics and the Institute for Fermentation, Japan. This report adds descriptions for type strains of 100 additional species to the 200 species previously deposited in the collections and described in Parts II and III of this series.
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