Halophilic microorganisms are responsible for the rosy discolouration of saline environments in three historical buildings with mural paintings

13 páginas.-- 5 figuras.-- 2 tablas.-- 64 referencias.-- Material suplementario (1 firura.-- 4 tablas).-- The ribosomal sequences of the bacterial- and archaeal clones and the bacterial isolates have been deposited at the NCBI GenBank database under the accession numbers (KF692550–KF692709 for the cloned sequences and HG515390–HG515401 for the bacterial isolates).

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ettenauer, J., Jurado, Valme, Piñar, Guadalupe, Miller, A. Z., Santner, Markus, Sáiz-Jiménez, Cesáreo, Sterflinger, K.
Format: artículo biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science 2014-08
Subjects:Actinobacteria, Bacterial strains, Bacterium identification, Bacterium isolation, Biodegradation, Biofilms, Building materials, Controlled study, Firmicutes, Halalkalicoccus, Halobacterium, Halococcus, Halophil, Microbial community, Molecular phylogeny, Nonhuman, Nucleotide sequence, Painting, Species dominance,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/101106
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