Alkalibacillus
Genus of bacteria From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Alkalibacillus is a genus in the phylum Bacillota (Bacteria).[1]
Alkalibacillus | |
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Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Bacteria |
Kingdom: | Bacillati |
Phylum: | Bacillota |
Class: | Bacilli |
Order: | Bacillales |
Family: | Alkalibacillaceae |
Genus: | Alkalibacillus Jeon et al. 2005[1] |
Type species | |
Alkalibacillus haloalkaliphilus (Fritze 1996) Jeon et al. 2005 | |
Species | |
See text |
Etymology
The name Alkalibacillus derives from:
Neo-Latin noun alkali (from Arabic article al, the; Arabic noun qaliy, ashes of saltwort), alkali; Latin masculine gender noun bacillus, rod; Neo-Latin masculine gender noun Alkalibacillus, bacillus living under alkaline conditions.[1]
Classification
Summarize
Perspective
The genus contains 8 species (including basonyms and synonyms), namely[1]
- A. aidingensis Li et al. 2021
- A. almallahensis Perez-Dav et al. 2014
- A. filiformis Romano et al. 2005 (Latin noun filum, a thread; Latin suff. -formis (from Latin noun forma, figure, shape, appearance), -like, in the shape of; Neo-Latin masculine gender adjective filiformis, thread-shaped.)[2]
- A. flavidus Yoon et al. 2010 (Latin masculine gender adjective flavidus, pale yellow.)[3]
- A. haloalkaliphilus (Fritze 1996) Jeon et al. 2005 (Type species of the genus); (Greek noun hals, halos (ἅλς, ἁλός), salt; Neo-Latin noun alkali (from Arabic article al, the; Arabic noun qaliy, ashes of saltwort), alkali; Greek adjective φίλος loving; Neo-Latin masculine gender adjective haloalkaliphilus, loving briny)[4]
- A. halophilus Tian et al. 2009 (Greek noun hals, halos (ἅλς, ἁλός), salt; Neo-Latin masculine gender adjective philus (from Greek masculine gender adjective φίλος), friend, loving; Neo-Latin masculine gender adjective halophilus, salt-loving.)[5]
- A. salilacus Jeon et al. 2005 (Latin noun sal salis, salt; Latin noun lacus -us, lake; Neo-Latin genitive case noun salilacus, of a salt lake.)[4]
- A. silvisoli Usami et al. 2007 (Latin noun silva, forest; Latin noun solum, soil; Neo-Latin genitive case noun silvisoli, of forest soil, the source of isolation of the type strain.)[6]
Phylogeny
The currently accepted taxonomy is based on the List of Prokaryotic names with Standing in Nomenclature (LPSN)[1] and National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI).[7]
16S rRNA based LTP_10_2024[8][9][10] | 120 marker proteins based GTDB 09-RS220[11][12][13] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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See also
References
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