Taxon DOI
10.1601/tx.5611
Name
(Andrewes and Horder 1906) Smith and Sherman 1938 (Approved Lists 1980) emend. Whiley and Beighton 1991
Taxonomic Rank
species
Methodology
Nomenclatural Taxonomy [1980-2022]
Incertae sedis taxa are placed using SOSCC (Garrity and Lilburn 2008)
Parent
Taxon RecordName Record
Rosenbach 1884 emend. Deibel and Seeley 1974 (Approved Lists 1980)
Members
(Andrewes and Horder 1906) Jensen et al. 2013
Jensen et al. 2013
Type Strain
representative organism
T (= = = = = = = = = = =)
Type Status
Taxonomy
The taxonomic placement of this species within the root Universal Root.

  Woese et al. 1990
  (None 2015) Woese et al. 1990
  (sic) Gibbons and Murray 2021
  Ludwig et al. 2010
  Ludwig et al. 2010
  Deibel and Seeley 1974 (Approved Lists 1980)
  Rosenbach 1884 emend. Deibel and Seeley 1974 (Approved Lists 1980)
  (Andrewes and Horder 1906) Smith and Sherman 1938 (Approved Lists 1980) emend. Whiley and Beighton 1991

The taxonomy from the rank of class and below is based upon currently published taxonomic opinion. For a complete taxonomy, refer to The Taxonomic Outline of Bacteria and Archaea, Release 7.7.
Non-Type Exemplars
Digital Object IdentifierStrain Equivalence
C238
F0211
11H5AP (=Oral Taxon 543)
1_2_62CV
SK1138
EX336960VC20 (=BEI HM-413)
C1051
Citation
When referring to this Abstract, please use its Digital Object Identifier.
Taxon Abstract for the species Streptococcus anginosus (Andrewes and Horder 1906) Smith and Sherman 1938 (Approved Lists 1980) emend. Whiley and Beighton 1991. Retrieved . https://doi.org/10.1601/tx.5611.
Source File
This information was last reviewed on May 10, 2017.

References


  1. Jensen A, Hoshino T, Kilian M. Taxonomy of the Anginosus group of the genus Streptococcus and description of Streptococcus anginosus subsp. whileyi subsp. nov. and Streptococcus constellatus subsp. viborgensis subsp. nov. Int J Syst Evol Microbiol 2013; 63:2506-2519. https://doi.org/10.1099/ijs.0.043232-0 [PubMed].
  2. Smith FR, Sherman JM. The hemolytic streptococci of human feces. J Infect Dis 1938; 62:186-189.