Abstract
Actinomycetes growing on acidified starch-casein agar seeded with suspensions of litter and mineral soil from a spruce forest were provisionally assigned to the genus Nocardia based upon colonial properties. Representative isolates were found to grow optimally at pH 5.5, have chemotaxonomic and morphological features consistent with their assignment to the genus Nocardia and formed two closely related subclades in the Nocardia 16S rRNA gene tree. DNA:DNA relatedness assays showed that representatives of the subclades belong to a single genomic species. The isolates were distantly associated with their nearest phylogenetic neighbour, the type strain of Nocardia kruczakiae, and were distinguished readily from the latter based on phenotypic properties. On the basis of these data it is proposed that the isolates merit recognition as a new species, Nocardia aciditolerans sp. nov. The type strain is isolate CSCA68 T (=KACC 17155T = NCIMB 14829T = DSM 45801 T). © 2013 The Author(s).
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Golinska, P., Wang, D., & Goodfellow, M. (2013). Nocardia aciditolerans sp. nov., isolated from a spruce forest soil. Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, International Journal of General and Molecular Microbiology, 103(5), 1079–1088. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10482-013-9887-3
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