“…These microbes, named magnetotactic bacteria (MTB) are widespread in freshwater and marine environments and diverse in morphology, such as rods, vibrios, spirilla, cocci, giant rods and multicellular MTB (Faivre et al, 2008). Multicellular MTB were first found in 1983 in the Rodrigo de Freitas lagoon in Brazil (Farina et al, 1983), then in other coastal lagoons in Brazil, in stratified water column and coastal salt marshes in New England, in Mediterranean coastal sediments and in tidal sand flats of the North Sea Mann et al, 1990b;Rodgers et al, 1990;Delong et al, 1993;Keim et al, 2004a;Lefe Ávre et al, 2007;Simmons et al, 2007;Wenter et al, 2009). These organisms have been denominated differently in history, e.g., magnetotactic multicellular aggregate , many-celled magnetotactic prokaryote (Rodgers et al, 1990;Simmons et al, 2007) or multicellular magnetotactic prokaryote (Keim et al, 2004a;Lins et al, 2007;Winklhofer et al, 2007).…”