Bacillus azotofixans sp. nov., a Nitrogen-Fixing Species from Brazilian Soils and Grass Roots
- 1 October 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Microbiology Society in International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology
- Vol. 34 (4), 451-456
- https://doi.org/10.1099/00207713-34-4-451
Abstract
A new species, Bacillus azotofixans, is described. This taxon is based upon 16 soil and root-associated strains that exhibit acetylene-reducing ability and nitrogen-fixing Bacillus sp. strain Hino. B. azotofixans is phenotypically similar to Bacillus polymyxa and Bacillus macerans. However, 13 tests (nitrate reduction; production of acid and gas from xylose, arabinose, lactose, ribose, and glycerol; resistance to lysozyme; liquefaction of gelatin; starch hydrolysis; decomposition of casein and pectin; production of dihydroxyacetone; susceptibility to B. polymyxa phages) differentiate it from B. polymyxa, and 12 characteristics (spore position; Voges-Proskauer test; nitrate reduction; production of acid and gas from xylose, arabinose, lactose, ribose, and glycerol; growth at 45°C; hydrolysis of starch; decomposition of pectin; formation of crystalline dextrins) differentiate it from B. macerans. The guanine-plus-cytosine contents of five strains ranged from 47.9 to 52.5 mol%. All strains reduced acetylene much more efficiently than B. polymyxa or B. macerans. In four strains, nitrogen fixation was confirmed by micro-Kjeldahl analysis of acetylene-reducing cultures. Acetylene reduction was not inhibited by nitrate and was not dependent on yeast extract or thiamin plus biotin. The proposed type strain of B. azotofixans is strain P3L-5 (= ATCC 35681).This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
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