Planomicrobium flavidum sp. nov., isolated from a marine solar saltern, and transfer of Planococcus stackebrandtii Mayilraj et al. 2005 to the genus Planomicrobium as Planomicrobium stackebrandtii comb. nov. (1/41)

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Jeotgalibacillus salarius sp. nov., isolated from a marine saltern, and reclassification of Marinibacillus marinus and Marinibacillus campisalis as Jeotgalibacillus marinus comb. nov. and Jeotgalibacillus campisalis comb. nov., respectively. (2/41)

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Cohnella yongneupensis sp. nov. and Cohnella ginsengisoli sp. nov., isolated from two different soils. (3/41)

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Planococcus salinarum sp. nov., isolated from a marine solar saltern, and emended description of the genus Planococcus. (4/41)

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Cohnella thailandensis sp. nov., a xylanolytic bacterium from Thai soil. (5/41)

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Cohnella damensis sp. nov., a motile xylanolytic bacteria isolated from a low altitude area in Tibet. (6/41)

A bacterial strain, 13-25(T) with xylanolytic activity isolated from a single present soil sample, was characterized with respect to its phenetic and phylogenetic characteristics. The cells of the isolate are gram staining variable rods. The predominant fatty acids are anteiso-C(15 : 0), C(16-0), and iso-C(16 : 0), the major respiratory quinone is menaquinone (MK-7), with a polar lipid profile with unknown aminophospholipids. The G+C content is 54.3 mol%. The 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis indicates that this organism belongs to the genus Cohnella, with Cohnella panacarvi as the closest phylogenetic neighbor. Low levels of 16S rRNA gene sequence similarity (<97.0%) with respect to other taxa with published names and the identification of distinctive phenetic features in the isolate indicate that the strain 13-25(T) represents a novel species of the genus Cohnella, for which the name Cohnella damensis sp. nov. is proposed. The type strain is 13-25(T) (=CCTCC AB 208103(T) =KCTC 13422(T)).  (+info)

Fontibacillus panacisegetis sp. nov., isolated from soil of a ginseng field. (7/41)

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Brochothrix thermosphacta bacteriophages feature heterogeneous and highly mosaic genomes and utilize unique prophage insertion sites. (8/41)

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