Like all Proteobacteria the two species stain
Gram-negative.(,[1]cf.[4]) They were isolated from coastal, surface waters of the north-western
Mediterranean Sea, specifically in February 2004 at the SOLA station located in the bay of
Banyuls-sur-Mer (42 2.99 N 3 0.89 E) at a depth of 3 metres.[1]
The cells are motile pleomorphic rods that are 2.9 μm long and 0.9 μm wide.[1] When grown on marine agar medium, they form cream colonies (i.e. no pigmentation). Apart from standard genetic differences for species (98% 16S, 55% DNA-DNA), the two species differ in that Nisaea denitrificans can fully denitrify whereas Nisaea nitritireducens cannot only reduce nitrite.[1]
The name Nisaea derives from: Latinfeminine gender noun Nisaea, nymph of the sea, referring to the marine origin (Mediterranean sea).[1]Nicaea is in fact a sea nymph and daughter of the river-god
Sangarius and
Cybele.
Whereas the specific epithets, refer to:
denitrificans:
Neo-Latin participle adjective denitrificans (from
Neo-Latin v. denitrifico), denitrifying.[1]
nitritireducens:
Neo-Latin noun nitris -itis, nitrite;
Latin participle adjective reducens, leading back, bringing back and (in chemistry) converting to a different oxidation state;
Neo-Latin participle adjective nitritireducens, reducing nitrite.[1]