Roseomonas eburnea
Appearance
Roseomonas eburnea | |
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Species: | R. eburnea
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Binomial name | |
Roseomonas eburnea Wang 2016
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Roseomonas eburnea is a species of Gram negative, strictly aerobic, coccobacilli-shaped, ivory-colored bacterium. It was first isolated from activated sludge from an herbicide-manufacturing wastewater treatment facility in Jiangsu province, China, and the species was first proposed in 2016. R. eburnea, unlike most species of Roseomonas which are pink or light red, is ivory-pigmented. The species name comes from Latin eburnea (white as ivory).[1] R. chloroacetimidivorans was isolated at the same time as R. eburnea.[2]
The optimum growth temperature for R. eburnea is 30 °C, but can grow in the 15-35 °C range. The optimum pH is 6.0-8.0.
References
[edit]- ^ Wang C, Deng S, Liu X, Yao L, Shi C, Jiang J, Kwon SW, He J, Li J. Roseomonas eburnea sp. nov., isolated from activated sludge. International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology. 2016 Jan 1;66(1):385-90.
- ^ Chu CW, Chen Q, Wang CH, Wang HM, Sun ZG, He Q, He J, Gu JG. Roseomonas chloroacetimidivorans sp. nov., a chloroacetamide herbicide-degrading bacterium isolated from activated sludge. Antonie van Leeuwenhoek. 2016 May 1;109(5):611-8.
External links
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