Name DOI
10.1601/nm.14508
Name
Peng et al. 2009 emend. Nicholson et al. 2020
Name Status
Validly Published
Current Authority
Peng et al. 2009 emend. Nicholson et al. 2020
Preferred Name
Taxonomic Rank
genus
Nomenclatural Type
(designated species)
Peng et al. 2009 emend. Nicholson et al. 2020
Taxonomy
Proper Form
Planobacterium Peng et al. 2009 emend. Nicholson et al. 2020
Nomenclatural History
The genus Planobacterium was originally proposed and validly published by Peng et al. 2009. Nicholson et al. published an emended description of this genus in 2020. Holmes et al. transferred the members of this genus into Vandamme et al. 1994 emend. Heidler von Heilborn et al. 2022 in 2013.
Citation
When referring specifically to this Abstract, please use its Digital Object Identifier.
Name Abstract for Planobacterium Peng et al. 2009 emend. Nicholson et al. 2020.. https://doi.org/10.1601/nm.14508.
Source File
This information was last reviewed on August 26, 2020.

References


  1. Peng F, Liu M, Zhang L, Dai J, Luo X, An H, Fang C. Planobacterium taklimakanense gen. nov., sp. nov., a member of the family Flavobacteriaceae that exhibits swimming motility, isolated from desert soil. Int J Syst Evol Microbiol 2009; 59:1672-1678. https://doi.org/10.1099/ijs.0.006619-0 [PubMed].
  2. Holmes B, Steigerwalt AG, Nicholson AC. DNA–DNA hybridization study of strains of Chryseobacterium, Elizabethkingia and Empedobacter and of other usually indoleproducing non-fermenters of CDC groups IIc, IIe, IIh and IIi, mostly from human clinical sources, and proposals of Chryseobacterium bernardetii sp. nov., Chryseobacterium carnis sp. nov., Chryseobacterium lactis sp. nov., Chryseobacterium nakagawai sp. nov. and Chryseobacterium taklimakanense comb. nov. Int J Syst Evol Microbiol 2013; 63:4639-4662. https://doi.org/10.1099/ijs.0.054353-0 [PubMed].
  3. Nicholson AC, Gulvik CA, Whitney AM, Humrighouse BW, Bell ME, Holmes B, Steigerwalt AG, Villarma A, Sheth M, Batra D, Rowe LA, Burroughs M, Pryor JC, Bernardet J-F, Hugo C, Kämpfer P, Newman JD, McQuiston JR. Division of the genus Chryseobacterium: Observation of discontinuities in amino acid identity values, a possible consequence of major extinction events, guides transfer of nine species to the genus Epilithonimonas, eleven species to the genus Kaistella, and three species to the genus Halpernia gen. nov., with description of Kaistella daneshvariae sp. nov. and Epilithonimonas vandammei sp. nov. derived from clinical specimens. Int J Syst Evol Microbiol 2020; 70:4432-4450. https://doi.org/10.1099/ijsem.0.003935 [PubMed].