Azotobacter is a
genus of usually
motile, oval or spherical
bacteria that form thick-walled
cysts and may produce large quantities of capsular
slime. They are aerobic, free-living soil
microbes which play an important role in the
nitrogen cycle in nature, binding atmospheric
nitrogen, which is inaccessible to plants, and releasing it in the form of
ammonium ions into the soil (
nitrogen fixation). In addition to being a
model organism for studying
diazotrophs, it is used by humans for the production of
biofertilizers,
food additives, and some
biopolymers. The first representative of the genus,
Azotobacter chroococcum, was discovered and described in 1901 by the Dutch
microbiologist and botanist
Martinus Beijerinck.
Azotobacter species are
Gram-negative bacteria found in neutral and alkaline soils, in water, and in association with some plants.