We found 1 definitions of division eubacteria from 1 different sources.
Noun |
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division eubacteria - one-celled monerans having simple cells with rigid walls and (in motile types) flagella | ||
division the act or process of dividing | ||
kingdom monera, kingdom prokaryotae, monera, prokayotae prokaryotic bacteria and blue-green algae and various primitive pathogens; because of lack of consensus on how to divide the organisms into phyla informal names are used for the major divisions | ||
bacteria order an order of bacteria | ||
bacteria family a family of bacteria | ||
bacteria genus a genus of bacteria | ||
bacteria species a species of bacteria | ||
eubacteria, eubacterium, true bacteria a large group of bacteria having rigid cell walls; motile types have flagella | ||
eubacteriales, order eubacteriales one of two usually recognized orders of true bacteria; Gram-positive spherical or rod-shaped forms; some are motile; in some classifications considered an order of Schizomycetes | ||
cyanophyta, division cyanophyta prokaryotic organisms sometimes considered a class or phylum or subkingdom; coextensive with the Cyanophyceae: cyanobacteria (blue-green algae) | ||
division schizophyta, schizophyta former term for the Cyanophyta | ||
order pseudomonadales, pseudomonadales one of two usually recognized orders of true bacteria; Gram-negative spiral or spherical or rod-shaped bacteria usually motile by polar flagella; some contain photosynthetic pigments | ||
order rickettsiales, rickettsiales pleomorphic Gram-negative microorganisms | ||
mycoplasmatales, order mycoplasmatales coextensive with the family Mycoplasmataceae | ||
actinomycetales, order actinomycetales filamentous or rod-shaped bacteria | ||
myxobacterales, myxobacteriales, order myxobacterales, order myxobacteria, order myxobacteriales an order of higher bacteria | ||
family micrococcaceae, micrococcaceae spherical or elliptical usually aerobic eubacteria that produce yellow or orange or red pigment; includes toxin-producing forms as well as harmless commensals and saprophytes |