Photobacterium leiognathi: Difference between revisions

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New contributions are welcome. Students, researchers, and others with knowledge and interest in microbiology are welcome to compose and edit pages.  To become an editor, please request a [[Contact MicrobeWiki|free account.]]<br><br>
New contributions are welcome. Students, researchers, and others with knowledge and interest in microbiology are welcome to compose and edit pages.  To become an editor, please request a [[Contact MicrobeWiki|free account.]]<br><br>
'''Educators:''' You may assign MicrobeWiki page creation and editing as projects for your students.  We create a [[List of class template pages | template page]] for your assignment, which you may edit to meet your needs.  See for example the pages created by the following classes:
'''Educators:''' You may assign MicrobeWiki page creation and editing as projects for your students.  We create a [[List of class template pages | template page]] for your assignment, which you may edit to meet your needs.  See for example the pages created by the following classes:
<b>
 
* [[UCSD 2007 Spring |BIMM120 Bacteriology]], Dr. Rachel Larsen and Dr. Kit Pogliano,  University of California at San Diego
{{class list}}
* [[BIOL 238 Project Index 2009]], [http://biology.kenyon.edu/slonc/slonc.htm Joan L. Slonczewski], [http://www.kenyon.edu/biology.xml Kenyon College]
* [[BIOL 191 Index]] 2009, [http://biology.kenyon.edu/slonc/slonc.htm Joan L. Slonczewski], [http://www.kenyon.edu/biology.xml Kenyon College]
* [[Sacred Heart University | BI 230 Microbiology]], Dr. Kirk Bartholomew, Sacred Heart University
* [[Michigan State University | Microbial Ecology]], Dr. Jay Lennon, Michigan State University</b>


Your students receive individual passwords.  Assessment and grading are up to you; after your class is over, we review pages for our standards.  Students of all levels, from first-year to graduate students, have contributed pages to our site.<br><br>
Your students receive individual passwords.  Assessment and grading are up to you; after your class is over, we review pages for our standards.  Students of all levels, from first-year to graduate students, have contributed pages to our site.<br><br>

Revision as of 22:38, 19 February 2010

Microbialbiorealm banner.jpg

A Microbial Diversity Resource


New contributions are welcome. Students, researchers, and others with knowledge and interest in microbiology are welcome to compose and edit pages. To become an editor, please request a free account.

Educators: You may assign MicrobeWiki page creation and editing as projects for your students. We create a template page for your assignment, which you may edit to meet your needs. See for example the pages created by the following classes:

Your students receive individual passwords. Assessment and grading are up to you; after your class is over, we review pages for our standards. Students of all levels, from first-year to graduate students, have contributed pages to our site.


Managing Editor
Daniel Barich '05
Advisor: Joan Slonczewski, Biology Dept, Kenyon College.
Funding: HHMI awards to Kenyon College, 2000, 2004
Student Editors at Kenyon College: Ryotaro Tashiro '09, Molly Schlemmer '08, Shrochis Karki '09, Allison Whipple '06, Zeva Levine (Beloit), Laura Damon-Moore (Beloit), Ariel Kahrl (Oberlin), Hannah Sacks '08, Michael Stulberg '05, Casey M. Smith '06, and Shana Scogin '07

Reviewed by: Focus on Microbiology Education, Jennifer L. Taylor, Summer 2005. Licensed for use, ASM MicrobeLibrary

Recommended Sites: NCBI Taxonomy, NCBI Microbial Genomes, The Prokaryotes: An Evolving Electronic Resource, LBSN List of Bacterial Names, MB451 Microbial Diversity, Science, PNAS, ASM Journals, Nature

Copyright notice. Readers may view, browse, and/or download material for noncommercial personal purposes. Please credit our site for use. Materials on our site obtained with permission from other sources require permission from those sources for further reproduction.

Disclaimer. Information on this site is provided solely for educational purposes. Medical questions should be referred to a physician.



Microbial Phylogeny

The three Domains of Life each have defining characteristics that are both separate and similar.
Within each Domain these ranks are shown: Division, Order, Genus. Links provide full taxonomy and description. See also Taxonomy Index.

Bacteria

Archaea

Eukarya

Acidobacteria

Actinobacteria

Aquificae

Bacteroidetes/Chlorobi group

Chlamydiae/Verrucomicrobia

Chloroflexi

Cyanobacteria

Firmicutes (Gram positive)

Nitrospirae

Planctomycetes

Proteobacteria (Alpha)

Proteobacteria (Beta)

Proteobacteria (Gamma)

Proteobacteria (Delta/Epsilon)

Spirochaetes

Thermotogae

Thermus/Deinococcus group

Crenarchaeota

Euryarchaeota

Korarchaeota

Nanoarchaeota

Opisthokonta

Viridiplantae (algae & plant)

Amebozoa

Cercozoa (shelled amebas)

Alveolata (have cortical alveoli)


Marine flagellates (other)


Heterokonta (Stramenopiles)

Discicristata

Excavata

Emerging Eukaryotes