Difference between revisions of "Category:Bacteria"

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|pagetitle =Bacteria
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|pagetitle =Bacteria  
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|pagebody =A typical bacterial cell is composed of an outer capsule, a cell wall, a  cell membrane, cytoplasm containing nuclear material and, if motile,  appendages such as flagella and fimbrae or pili. Some species of  bacteria are more resistant to environmental influences than others,  particularly those species of bacteria that are able to produce spores  which can remain inactive until the appropriate environmental conditions  prevail allowing the bacteria to resist conditions such as freezing,  wet, dry or hot
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conditions.<br />
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The structural  features of pathogenic bacteria are important in the production of  disease and also very useful for the identification and diagnosis of  infection in veterinary medicine.<br />
 
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<categorytree mode=pages>Bacteria</categorytree>
 
<categorytree mode=pages>Bacteria</categorytree>
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|logo =Bacteria logo.jpg
 
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[[Category:Infectious_Agents]]
 
[[Category:Infectious_Agents]]
[[Category:To_Do_-_Bacteria]]
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'''Bacterial classification'''
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According to the International Code of Nomenclature of Bacteria ("The Bacteriological Code", revision of 1990) and the International Committee on Systematics of Procaryotes (ICSP), bacteria of veterinary interest are divided into 8 phyla:-
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Phylum Actinobacteria (orders Actinomycetales and Bifidobacteriales)
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Phylum Cyanobacteria (the blue-green algae)
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Phylum Fusobacteria (genera ''Fusobacterium'' and ''Streptobacillus'')
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Phylum Spirochaetes
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Phylum Formicutes (classes Bacilli, Clostridia, Erysipelotrichi, Mollicutes)
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Phylum Bacteroidetes (orders Bacterioidales and Cytophagales)
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Phylum Chlamydiae
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Phylum Proteobacteria (see entry under this name)

Latest revision as of 14:31, 28 June 2014

Bacteria

A typical bacterial cell is composed of an outer capsule, a cell wall, a cell membrane, cytoplasm containing nuclear material and, if motile, appendages such as flagella and fimbrae or pili. Some species of bacteria are more resistant to environmental influences than others, particularly those species of bacteria that are able to produce spores which can remain inactive until the appropriate environmental conditions prevail allowing the bacteria to resist conditions such as freezing, wet, dry or hot

conditions.

The structural features of pathogenic bacteria are important in the production of disease and also very useful for the identification and diagnosis of infection in veterinary medicine.


Bacterial classification According to the International Code of Nomenclature of Bacteria ("The Bacteriological Code", revision of 1990) and the International Committee on Systematics of Procaryotes (ICSP), bacteria of veterinary interest are divided into 8 phyla:-

Phylum Actinobacteria (orders Actinomycetales and Bifidobacteriales)

Phylum Cyanobacteria (the blue-green algae)

Phylum Fusobacteria (genera Fusobacterium and Streptobacillus)

Phylum Spirochaetes

Phylum Formicutes (classes Bacilli, Clostridia, Erysipelotrichi, Mollicutes)

Phylum Bacteroidetes (orders Bacterioidales and Cytophagales)

Phylum Chlamydiae

Phylum Proteobacteria (see entry under this name)

Subcategories

This category has only the following subcategory.

B