“…A number of Paracoccus species can also grow chemoautotrophically and use nitrate as electron acceptor (such as Paracoccus denitrificans, Ludwig et al, 1993), or use hydrogen as electron donor (such as Paracoccus versutus, Katayama et al, 1995). Members of the genus Paracoccus are metabolically versatile and are widely distributed in soil (Siller et al, 1996;Tsubokura et al, 1999), bioreactors (La et al, 2005;Lipski et al, 1998), activated sludge (Katayama et al, 1995;Liu et al, 2006) and in the marine environment (Pukall et al, 2003;Berry et al, 2003;Lee et al, 2004;Kim et al, 2006). In this study, a marine bacterial isolate, the strain T that is able to grow at 7 u C and high salt concentrations (8 % NaCl), was investigated for its taxonomic status.…”