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J Bacteriol. 1968 January; 95(1): 211-220
Copyright © 1968 American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Properties of Bacteria Isolated from Deep-Sea Sediments

M. M. Quigley and R. R. Colwell

Department of Biology, Georgetown University, Washington, D.C. 20007

ABSTRACT

Thirty-eight isolates were subjected to taxonomic analysis by computer. Of the 38 isolates, 31 were from sediment samples collected at depths from 9,400 to 10,400 meters in the Philippine and Marianas Trenches of the Pacific Ocean, and 7 cultures were from seawater samples collected at various depths from surface to 4,000 meters and from several locations in the Pacific Ocean. A total of 116 characteristics were determined for each isolate, coded, and transferred to punch cards. Similarity values were obtained by computer analysis, with the use of two recently developed computer programs. Five distinct phenetic clusters were observed from the numerical analyses. Four of the clusters were identified as species of the genus Pseudomonas, and one, as an aerogenic species of Aeromonas. Group IV was identified as pigmented Pseudomonas fluorescens, and the major cluster, consisting of groups I and II, which merged at a species level of similarity, was treated as a new species of Pseudomonas. The 38 strain data were compared with data for 132 marine and nonmarine strains previously subjected to computer taxonomic analysis. The barotolerant deep-sea strains, with the exception of the deep-sea P. fluorescens isolates, clustered separately from all other marine strains.


J Bacteriol. 1968 January; 95(1): 211-220
Copyright © 1968 American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.







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