Paenibacillus

Paenibacillus
Scientific classification
Domain: Bacteria
Kingdom: Bacillati
Phylum: Bacillota
Class: Bacilli
Order: Paenibacillales
Family: Paenibacillaceae
Genus: Paenibacillus
Ash et al., 1994
Species
List
  • P. agarexedens
  • P. agaridevorans
  • P. alginolyticus
  • P. alkaliterrae
  • P. alvei
  • P. amylolyticus
  • P. anaericanus
  • P. antarcticus
  • P. apiarius
  • P. assamensis
  • P. azoreducens
  • P. azotofixans
  • P. barcinonensis
  • P. borealis
  • P. brasilensis
  • P. brassicae
  • P. campinasensis
  • P. chinjuensis
  • P. chitinolyticus
  • P. chondroitinus
  • P. cineris
  • P. cookii
  • P. curdlanolyticus
  • P. daejeonensis
  • P. dendritiformis
  • P. durum
  • P. ehimensis
  • P. elgii
  • P. favisporus
  • P. glucanolyticus
  • P. glycanilyticus
  • P. gordonae
  • P. graminis
  • P. granivorans
  • P. hodogayensis
  • P. illinoisensis
  • P. jamilae
  • P. kobensis
  • P. koleovorans
  • P. koreensis
  • P. kribbensis
  • P. lactis
  • P. larvae
  • P. lautus
  • P. lentimorbus
  • P. macerans
  • P. macquariensis
  • P. massiliensis
  • P. mendelii
  • P. motobuensis
  • P. naphthalenovorans
  • P. nematophilus
  • P. odorifer
  • P. pabuli
  • P. peoriae
  • P. phoenicis
  • P. phyllosphaerae
  • P. polymyxa
  • P. popilliae
  • P. pulvifaciens
  • P. rhizosphaerae
  • P. sanguinis
  • P. stellifer
  • P. terrae
  • P. thiaminolyticus
  • P. timonensis
  • P. tundrae
  • P. turicensis
  • P. tylopili
  • P. validus
  • P. vortex
  • P. vulneris
  • P. wynnii
  • P. xylanilyticus

Paenibacillus is a genus of facultative anaerobic, endospore-forming bacteria, originally included within the genus Bacillus, and then reclassified as a separate genus in 1993. Bacteria belonging to this genus have been detected in a variety of environments, such as soil, water, rhizosphere, vegetable matter, forage, and insect larvae, as well as clinical samples. The name reflects: Latin paene means almost, so the paenibacilli are literally "almost bacilli". The genus includes P. larvae, which causes American foulbrood in honeybees, P. polymyxa, which is capable of fixing nitrogen, so is used in agriculture and horticulture, the Paenibacillus sp. JDR-2 which is a rich source of chemical agents for biotechnology applications, and pattern-forming strains such as P. vortex and P. dendritiformis discovered in the early '90s, which develop complex colonies with intricate architectures as shown in the pictures: