Search

The Online Encyclopedia and Dictionary

 
     
 

Encyclopedia

Dictionary

Quotes

   
 

Green sulfur bacteria

Green sulfur bacteria

|- style="text-align:center;" ! style="background: lightgrey;" | Scientific classification |- style="text-align:center;" |

|- valign=top |Domain:||Bacteria |- valign=top |Phylum:||Chlorobi group |- valign=top |Class:||Chlorobia |- valign=top |Order:||Chlorobiales |- valign=top |Family:||Chlorobiaceae |} |- style="text-align:center; background:lightgrey;" !Genera |- | Chlorobium
Ancalochloris
Chloroherpeton
Clathrochloris
Pelodictyon
Prostheochloris |} The green sulfur bacteria are a family (Chlorobiaceae) of phototrophic bacteria. No other bacterial families are known to be closely related to them, and they are accordingly placed in their own phylum (Chlorobi). The phylum is most closely related to Bacteroidetes.

Green sulfur bacteria are generally nonmotile (one species has a flagellum), and come in spheres, rods, and spirals. Their environment must be oxygen-free, although they need light to grow. They engage in photosynthesis, using bacteriochlorophylls c, d, and e in vesicles called chlorosomes attached to the membrane, and in the presence of sulfur, which acts as electron donor. This is used in the form of sulfide ions, producing globules of neutral sulfur outside the cell, which may then be further oxidized.

See also

  • "The Family Chlorobiaceae" in The Prokaryotes [1] http://141.150.157.117:8080/prokPUB/chaprender/jsp/showchap.jsp?chapnum=323


Last updated: 03-15-2005 04:33:58
Last updated: 05-03-2005 17:50:55