methanotroph
English
Etymology
From methane + -o- + -troph.
Noun
methanotroph (plural methanotrophs)
- Any bacterium or archaeon that consumes methane as a source of carbon and of energy.
- Synonym: methanophile
- 1998, Richard S. Hanson, “6: Ecology of Methylotrophic Bacteria”, in Robert S. Burlage, editor, Techniques in Microbial Ecology, page 147:
- Because heterotrophic bacteria rapidly outgrow methanotrophs in media supplemented with complex nutrients, most pure cultures of methanotrophs have been isolated using defined media without organic supplements.
- 2006, John Bowman, “Chapter 3.1.14: The Methanotrophs-The Families Methylococcaceae and Methylocystaceae”, in Stanley Falkow, Eugene Rosenberg, Karl-Heinz Schleifer, Erko Stackebrandt, editors, The Prokaryotes, Volume 5: Proteobacteria: Alpha and Beta Subclasses, 3rd edition, Springer, page 272:
- In addition, some methanotrophs, such as the species of Methylococcus and Methylocaldum, lack distinctive fatty acid biomarkers.
Related terms
Translations
bacterium or archaeon that consumes methane
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