A study of unusual metabolic variants of <italic>Aeromonas caviae</italic> and <italic>Aeromonas hydrophila</italic> using a polyphasic taxonomic approach
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Abstract
Variation in acid production from carbohydrate metabolism has been identified in Aeromonas as a potential indicator for new subspecies. Therefore, pure cultures of non-lactose fermenting Aeromonas caviae, a cause of waterborne infections in humans and other vertebrates, were studied after noting a mixture of acid producing and non-acid producing colonies after four days of incubation on MacConkey agar at ambient temperature. Unusual arabinose negative strains of A. hydrophila (usually arabinose positive) were added to the project to further study the correlation between carbohydrate fermentation and taxonomy. These metabolic variants of A. caviae and A. hydrophila were studied for phenotypic differences via carbohydrate utilization assays as well as genotypic differences via FAFLP. The results suggest that the A. caviae isolates MB3 and MB7 should be considered novel subspecies, while the arabinose negative strain designated A. hydrophila subsp. dhakensis is correctly identified as a subspecies of A. hydrophila.