Thermomicrobia
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Thermomicrobia
Summary
Thermomicrobia is a taxon[1]. Thermomicrobia ranks in the top 0.83% of taxon entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (7 views/month, #1,626 of 195,241).[2]
Key Facts
- Thermomicrobia's image is recorded as Aerial image of Grand Prismatic Spring (view from the south).jpg[3].
- Thermomicrobia's image is recorded as Yellowstone, green water from pool.jpg[4].
- Thermomicrobia's instance of is recorded as taxon[5].
- Thermomicrobia's taxon rank is recorded as class[6].
- Thermomicrobia's parent taxon is recorded as Thermomicrobiota[7].
- Thermomicrobia's taxon name is recorded as Thermomicrobia[8].
- Thermomicrobia's taxonomic type is recorded as Thermomicrobium[9].
- Thermomicrobia's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/02sjst[10].
- Thermomicrobia's NCBI taxonomy ID is recorded as 189775[11].
- Thermomicrobia's ITIS TSN is recorded as 956173[12].
- Thermomicrobia's Encyclopedia of Life ID is recorded as 299[13].
- Thermomicrobia's GBIF taxon ID is recorded as 363[14].
- Thermomicrobia's WoRMS-ID for taxa is recorded as 571462[15].
- Thermomicrobia's Dyntaxa ID is recorded as 5000126[16].
- Thermomicrobia's LPSN URL is recorded as https://lpsn.dsmz.de/class/thermomicrobia[17].
- Thermomicrobia's New Zealand Organisms Register ID is recorded as 0c728126-803d-482b-85a3-ddd8e66c5d99[18].
- Thermomicrobia's UMLS CUI is recorded as C1212876[19].
- Thermomicrobia's iNaturalist taxon ID is recorded as 151861[20].
- Thermomicrobia's IRMNG ID is recorded as 1020[21].
- Thermomicrobia's Microsoft Academic ID is recorded as 2780752031[22].
- Thermomicrobia's NBIC scientific name ID is recorded as 810[23].
- Thermomicrobia's Open Tree of Life ID is recorded as 5889463[24].
- Thermomicrobia's homonymous taxon is recorded as Thermomicrobia[25].
- Thermomicrobia's SeqCode Registry ID is recorded as 13949[26].
Why It Matters
Thermomicrobia ranks in the top 0.83% of taxon entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (7 views/month, #1,626 of 195,241).[2] Thermomicrobia has Wikipedia articles in 11 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[27] Thermomicrobia is known by 7 alternative names across languages and contexts.[28]