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Community Sequencing Program
Sequencing Plans for 2008

For status information, see the Genome Projects section.

Organism Proposer Affiliation
Large Eukaryotes
Eucalyptus tree
Why?
Myburg Univ. of Pretoria
Foxtail millet (Setaria italica)
Why?
Bennetzen Univ. of Georgia
Porphyra purpurea (a marine red alga)
Why?
Brawley Univ. of Maine
Small Eukaryotes
Agaricus bisporus (a leaf-litter degrading homobasidiomycete )
Why?
Challen Univ. of Warwick
Heterodera glycines (Soybean Cyst Nematode)
Why?
Lambert Univ. of illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Marchantia polymorpha
Why?
Bowman Monash Univ. and Univ. of California Davis
Paxillus involutus (an ectomycorrhizal fungus)
Why?
Tunlid Lund Univ.
Phaeocystis antarctica: A dominant phytoplankter and ice alga in the Southern Ocean
Why?
Berg Stanford Univ.
Phaeocystis globosa
Why?
Allen The Inst. for Genomic Research
ESTs for Pines and Other Conifers
Why?
Dean Univ. of Georgia
Tetrahymena thermophila strain SB210
Why?
Collins Univ. of California Berkeley
Metagenomes
Type I Accumulibacter
Why?
McMahon Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison
Anammox bacteria (Scalindua marina, Brocadia fulgida, and Anammoxglobus propionicus)
Why?
Jetten Radboud Univ.
A biogas-producing microbial community
Why?
Wu Univ. of California Davis
Extreme microbial habitats across the Yellowstone geothermal ecosystem
Why?
Inskeep Montana State Univ.
Isolates
Allochromatium vinosum DSM 180(T)
Why?
Dahl Univ. of Bonn
Uncultivated methane-oxidizing archaeon ANME-1
Why?
Hallam Univ. of British Columbia
Budding and non-budding stalked bacteria from aquatic environments (Asticcacaulis biprosthecum, Asticcacaulis excentricus, Brevundimonas subvibrioides, Herschia baltica, Hyphomicrobium denitrificans, and Rhodomicrobium vannielii)
Why?
Brun Indiana Univ.
Diaphorobacter sp. strain TPSY, Ferrutens nitratireducens strain 2002, and Azospira suillum strain PS
Why?
Coates Univ. of California Berkeley
Frankia strains (EuI1c, BCU110501, R43, BMG5.12, and AmMr)
Why?
Tisa Univ. of New Hampshire
Haloalkaliphilic sulfate-, thiosulfate- and sulfur-reducing bacteria (Desulfonatronovirga dismutans ASO3-1, Desulfovibrio alkaliphilus AHT2, and Dethiobacter alkaliphilus AHT1)
Why?
Muyzer Delft Univ. of Technology
Halothiobacillus neapolitanus and Thiomonas intermedia
Why?
Heinhorst Univ. of Southern Mississippi
Thermophilic or hyperthermophilic methanoarchaea within the Methanococcales (Methanothermococcus okinawensis IH1, Methanotorris igneus Kol 5, Methanotorris formicicus Mc-S-70, Methanocaldococcus fervens AG86, Methanocaldococcus infernus ME, Methanocaldococcus vulcanius M7, and Methanocaldococcus strain FS406-22)
Why?
Whitman Univ. of Georgia
Type I and Type II methanotrophic bacteria (Methylomicrobium album BG8 and Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b)
Why?
Stein Univ. of California Riverside
Two Micromonosporas (aurantiaca and L5)
Why?
Hirsch Univ. of California Los Angeles
Natrialba magadii ATCC 43099
Why?
Maupin-Furlow Univ. of Florida
Pseudonocardia dioxanivorans CB1190
Why?
Mahendra Univ. of California Berkeley
Selenospirillum indicus
Why?
Bini Rutgers Univ.
Starkeya novella
Why?
Kappler Univ. of Queensland
Thermovibrio ammonificans DSM 15698
Why?
Vetriani Rutgers Univ.
Variovorax paradoxus strains (S110 and EPS)
Why?
Han Rensselaer Polytechnic Inst.
Zymomonas mobilis strains: Zymomonas mobilis strains: subsp. mobilis ATCC 10988, ATCC 29191, ATCC 31821 (ZM4), CP4; subsp. pomaceae ATCC 29192; sp. NCIB 11163
Why?
Pappas Univ. of Athens