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Draft Genome Sequence of “ Candidatus Cronobacter colletis” NCTC 14934 T , a New Species in the Genus Cronobacter

Citation
Masood et al. (2014). Genome Announcements 2 (3)
Names
Ca. Cronobacter colletis
Abstract
ABSTRACT Members of the Cronobacter genus are associated with serious infections in neonates. This is the first report of the draft genome sequence for the newly proposed species Cronobacter colletis .

‘Candidatus Phytoplasma palmicola’, associated with a lethal yellowing-type disease of coconut (Cocos nucifera L.) in Mozambique

Citation
Harrison et al. (2014). International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology 64 (Pt_6)
Names
Ca. Phytoplasma palmicola
Abstract
In this study, the taxonomic position and group classification of the phytoplasma associated with a lethal yellowing-type disease (LYD) of coconut (Cocos nucifera L.) in Mozambique were addressed. Pairwise similarity values based on alignment of nearly full-length 16S rRNA gene sequences (1530 bp) revealed that the Mozambique coconut phytoplasma (LYDM) shared 100 % identity with a comparable sequence derived from a phytoplasma strain (LDN) responsible for Awka wilt disease of coconut in Nigeria,
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Thermoflexus hugenholtzii gen. nov., sp. nov., a thermophilic, microaerophilic, filamentous bacterium representing a novel class in the Chloroflexi, Thermoflexia classis nov., and description of Thermoflexaceae fam. nov. and Thermoflexales ord. nov

Citation
Dodsworth et al. (2014). International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology 64 (Pt_6)
Names
“Roseilineaceae”
Abstract
A thermophilic, filamentous, heterotrophic bacterium, designated strain JAD2T, a member of an as-yet uncultivated lineage that is present and sometimes abundant in some hot springs worldwide, was isolated from sediment of Great Boiling Spring in Nevada, USA. Cells had a mean diameter of 0.3 µm and length of 4.0 µm, and formed filaments that typically ranged in length from 20 to 200 µm. Filaments were negative for the Gram stain reaction, spores were not formed and motility was not observed. The
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First Report of ‘Candidatus Liberibacter solanacearum’ in Carrot in France

Citation
Loiseau et al. (2014). Plant Disease 98 (6)
Names
“Liberibacter solanacearum”
Abstract
In summer 2012, carrot (Daucus carota L.) plants displaying symptoms of leaf yellowing, stunting and proliferation of dwarfed shoots with bushy tops, and a dense hairy growth of secondary roots were observed. Symptomatic carrots were collected from three fields used for seed production and located in Region Centre of France near Orléans. The presence of psyllids (Psyllidae) in one of the fields was reported but they were not clearly identified. Fifty percent of the field was infected. Due to a
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Morphological and molecular studies of Neosynechococcus sphagnicola, gen. et sp. nov. (Cyanobacteria, Synechococcales)

Citation
Dvořák et al. (2014). Phytotaxa 170 (1)
Names
Neosynechococcus Neosynechococcus sphagnicola T
Abstract
The genus Synechococcus represents an enigmatic group of cyanobacteria with very simple unicellular morphology and polyphyletic evolutionary origin. Here, we describe a new genus based on strain of Synechococcus-like cyanobacterium. The strain was isolated from the peat bog Klin (Slovakia), where it occupies different niches such as hyaline cells of Sphagnum, sheaths of cyanobacteria, dead cells of desmids, carapaces of dead crustaceans, and solitary in detritus. We describe this new genus using
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Rickettsia africae and Candidatus Rickettsia barbariae in Ticks in Israel

Citation
Waner et al. (2014). The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 90 (5)
Names
Ca. Rickettsia barbariae
Abstract
DNA of several spotted fever group rickettsiae was found in ticks in Israel. The findings include evidence for the existence of Rickettsia africae and Candidatus Rickettsia barbariae in ticks in Israel. The DNA of R. africae was detected in a Hyalomma detritum tick from a wild boar and DNA of C. Rickettsia barbariae was detected in Rhipicephalus turanicus and Rhipicephalus sanguineus collected from vegetation. The DNA of Rickettsia massiliae was found in Rh. sanguineus and Haemaphysalis erinacei
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