Pseudomonas agarici
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| Pseudomonas agarici | ||||||||||||||
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| Scientific classification | ||||||||||||||
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| Binomial name | ||||||||||||||
| Pseudomonas agarici Young 1970. |
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| Type strain | ||||||||||||||
| ATCC 25941 CCUG 32769 |
Pseudomonas agarici is a Gram-negative soil bacterium that causes drippy gill in mushrooms (Agaricus bisporus)[1]. It was first isolated in New Zealand. P. agarici couldn't be grouped based on 16S rRNA analysis, so it is designated incertae sedis in the genus Pseudomonas[2].
[edit] References
- ^ Young, JM (1970). "Drippy gill: a bacterial disease of cultivated mushrooms caused by Pseudomonas agarici n. sp.". NZ J Agric Res 13: 977–990.
- ^ Anzai, et al. (2000, Jul). "Phylogenetic affiliation of the pseudomonads based on 16S rRNA sequence". Int J Syst Evol Microbiol 50 (Pt 4): 1563–89. PMID 10939664.
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