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Betaproteobacteria play an important role in denitrification, removal of phosphorus, and xenobiotic degradation from waste. [7] Various human activities, such as fertilizer production and chemical plant usage, release significant amounts of ammonium ions into rivers and oceans. [ 8 ]
In 2017, the Betaproteobacteria was subject to major revisions and the class Hydrogenophilalia was created to contain the order Hydrogenophilales [4] Pseudomonadota classes with validly published names include some prominent genera: [26] e.g.: Acidithiobacillia: Acidithiobacillus, Thermithiobacillus
Candidatus Accumulibacter phosphatis (CAP) is an unclassified type of Betaproteobacteria that is a common bacterial community member of sewage treatment and wastewater treatment plants performing enhanced biological phosphorus removal (EBPR) [1] and is a polyphosphate-accumulating organism.
This category has the following 6 subcategories, out of 6 total. B. Burkholderiales (3 C, 218 P) M. Methylophilaceae (6 P) N. ... Pages in category "Betaproteobacteria"
Ralstonia pickettii is a Betaproteobacteria species found in moist environments such as soils, rivers, and lakes. It has also been identified in biofilms in plastic water pipes. It is an oligotrophic organism, making it capable of surviving in areas with a very low concentration of nutrients.
The Rhodocyclales [1] are an order of the class Betaproteobacteria in the phylum Pseudomonadota ("Proteobacteria"). [2] Following a major reclassification of the class in 2017, the previously monofamilial order was split into three families:
Thauera is a genus of Gram-negative bacteria in the family Zoogloeaceae of the order Rhodocyclales of the Betaproteobacteria. The genus is named for the German microbiologist Rudolf Thauer. Most species of this genus are motile by flagella and are mostly rod-shaped. [2] The species occur in wet soil and polluted freshwater. [2]
Thiobacillus is a genus of Gram-negative Betaproteobacteria. Thiobacillus thioparus is the type species of the genus, and the type strain thereof is the Starkey T strain, isolated by Robert Starkey in the 1930s from a field at Rutgers University in the United States of America.