Acetobacteraceae (2) | ![]() |
Anaplasmataceae (1) | ![]() |
Bacteroidaceae (8) | ![]() |
Bartonella (8) | ![]() |
Brucella (7) | ![]() |
Campylobacter (27) | ![]() |
Chlamydiales (3) | ![]() |
Enterobacteriaceae (5) | ![]() |
Escherichia (196) | ![]() |
Gram-negative bacteria (3) | ![]() |
Helicobacter (3) | ![]() |
Klebsiella (3) | ![]() |
Pasteurella (1) | ![]() |
Proteus (5) | ![]() |
Pseudomonadaceae (41) | ![]() |
Pseudomonadales (1) | ![]() |
Rhizobiaceae (13) | ![]() |
Rickettsieae (2) | ![]() |
Salmonella (106) | ![]() |
Serratia (1) | ![]() |
Shigella (2) | ![]() |
Veillonellaceae (1) | ![]() |
Vibrio (2) | ![]() |
Xenorhabdus (2) | ![]() |
Zymomona (1) | ![]() |
The species dubbed Edwardsiella andrillae is the first-ever anemone known to live on ice. Transparency is a theme for two other new species. The itsy-bitsy shrimp Liropus minusculus was found in a cave on Santa catalina Island off the coast of California.
Clostridium difficile and drug-resistant enterobacteriaceae are generally infections people get while they are in hospitals from their catheters breathing machines and other invasive equipment.
(E coli) as well as species of Klebsiella Enterobacter Pseudomonas and Serratia. Late-onset sepsis commonly occurs in about 22 percent of very-low-birth-weight babies the United states
Discovery on Ice Edwardsiella andrillae Location: Antarctica A species of sea anemone living under a glacier on the Ross Ice shelf in Antarctica raises questions by its very existence.
These samples were tested for the presence of ESBL-producing Enterobacteriaceae a family of gram-negative bacteria that includes Salmonella E coli and Klebsiella.
< Back - Next >
Overtext Web Module V3.0 Alpha
Copyright Semantic-Knowledge, 1994-2011