This name has been marked as incorrect, with the correct name for this
taxon being Grylomicrobium aquisgranenseT.
If you consider this to be a mistake, please
contact us to revise this assessment.
This name was registered by a mechanism parallel to registry lists.
Name submission
This name was submitted for evaluation
by a mechanism parallel to registry lists.
Name endorsement
This name was marked as endorsed.
SeqCode notification
The SeqCode was notified
of effective publication of this name,
through validation under another code of nomenclature.
Name validation
This name is validly published
but the SeqCode Registry does not have a priority date on file.
Valid (ICNP)
This name has been validly published under the rules of the ICNP and has priority in the scientific record
StrainInfo data
Automated Estimates
This genome was automatically retrieved and processed using MiGA
(The Microbial Genomes Atlas) [1], and the estimate has not been
overridden by the submitter.
The scientific names of all taxa must be treated as Latin and spelled only with
the Latin alphabet. A species name is a binary combination of a genus name and a
specific epithet; names of taxa above the rank of species are single words.
Typographical signs, numbers, and additional characters cannot be used.
To form new prokaryotic names, authors are advised as follows:
Names that are very long or difficult to pronounce should be avoided.
Names should differ by at least three characters from existing names of
genera or species within the same genus.
Languages other than Latin should be avoided when Latin equivalents exist or
can be constructed by combining Latin word elements. Exceptions include names
derived from local items such as foods, drinks, geographic localities, and
other names for which no Latin words exist.
Authors should not name organisms after themselves. If names are formed from
personal names, they should contain only the name of one person. They may
contain the untruncated family and/or first names.
All personal genus names should be feminine regardless of the gender identity
of the person they commemorate.
Names should not be deliberately contentious or abusive of any person, gender
or sexual identity, race, religion, political belief, or ideology.
Names that include mnemonic cues are preferred because they promote learning
and memory.
Authors should attend to the following recommendations and those of
Recommendation 9 when forming species names.
When a species epithet is chosen to indicate a property or source of the
species, epithets should not express a character common to all, or nearly
all, the species of a genus.
When the species epithet is an adjective, it should agree in gender with the
genus name.