“…Members of the genus Weissella have been isolated from a variety of sources, such as fresh vegetables, fermented silage (Dellaglio and Torriani, 1986;Ennahar et al, 2003;Wang and Nishinno, 2008), meat or meat products (Milbourne, 1983;Santos et al, 2005;Koort et al, 2006), desert spring and desert plants (Holzapfel and van Wyk, 1982), sugar cane, carrot juice, row milk and sewage (Hammes and Vogel, 1995), milking machine slime (Kandler et al, 1983), soil (Magnusson et al, 2002), fermented sausages (Collins et al, 1993), Korean kimchi (Choi et al, 2002;Lee et al, 2002;Kim and Chun, 2005), Malaysian foods (Leisner et al, 1999;Bjö rkroth et al, 2002) or fermented mescal of Agave salmiana (Escalante- Minakata et al, 2008). But only Weissella confusa and Weissella cibaria have been described from human or animal clinical samples.…”