123bingo

Taxobox bingo 123bingo begin color lightgrey name AquificeaeTaxobox begin placement 123bingo color lightgreyTaxobox regnum entry taxon BacteriaTaxobox phylum entry taxon AquificaeTaxobox 123bingo classis entry taxon AquificaeTaxobox ordo entry taxon AquificalesTaxobox familia entry taxon AquificaceaeTaxobox genus entry taxon AquifexTaxobox 123bingo species entry taxon A. pyrophilusTaxobox end placementTaxobox section binomial color lightgrey binomial_name Aquifex pyrophilus author Robert Huber and Karl Stetter date 1992Taxobox endAquifex

pyrophilus is a rod-shaped bacterium with a length of 2-6 micrometers and 123bingo a diameter of around half a micrometer. It is one of a handful of species in the Aquificae bingo phylum, an unusual group of thermophilia bacteria that are thought to be some of the oldest species in the eubacteria domain pyrophilus grows best in water between 85 to 95 °Celsius and can be found near underwater volcanoes or hot springs. It typically uses oxygen in its respiration, producing water as a biproduct, thus leading to the name "Aquifex," meaning "water-maker." However A. pyrophilus can even grow anaerobically by reducing nitrogen instead

of oxygen. Members of the species 123bingo tend to form large cell congloberations, comprised of up to 100 individual cells. It was discovered just north of Iceland.The genome of Aquifex aeolicus, a member of the same genus, has been successfully mapped. Comparison of this genome to other organisms showed that around 16% of its bingo genes originated from the Archaea domain. It is assumed that A. bingo pyrophilus 123bingo also has this property.External links and references Deckert, Gerard, et al. 1998. " The complete genome of the hyperthermophilic bacterium Aquifex aeolicus." Nature, Vol. 392. Macmillan Publishers. 353-358. The Prokaryotes: An Evolving Electronic Resource for the Mircobiological Community. 2004. Springer-Verlag New York, LLC.Aquificae