[eng] The introduction of genomics is profoundly changing current bacterial taxonomy.
Phylogenomics provides accurate methods for delineating species and allows us to infer the phylogeny
of higher taxonomic ranks as well as those at the subspecies level. We present as a model the currently
accepted taxonomy of the genus Pseudomonas and how it can be modified when new taxonomic
methodologies are applied. A phylogeny of the species in the genus deduced from analyses of gene
sequences or by whole genome comparison with di erent algorithms allows three main conclusions:
(i) several named species are synonymous and have to be reorganized in a single genomic species;
(ii) many strains assigned to known species have to be proposed as new genomic species within the
genus; and (iii) the main phylogenetic groups defined by 4-, 100- and 120-gene multilocus sequence
analyses are concordant with the groupings in the whole genome analyses. Moreover, the boundaries
of the genus Pseudomonas are also discussed based on phylogenomic analyses in relation to other
genera in the family Pseudomonadaceae. The new technologies will result in a substantial increase
in the number of species and probably split the current genus into several genera or subgenera,
although these classifications have to be supported by a polyphasic taxonomic approach.