- Which microorganism is used for production of methanol as fuel in industry?
(1) Acetobacter (2) Azobacter
(3) Sacchromyces (4) ClostridiumCorrect answer: (4) Clostridium
Methanol as an industrial fuel can be produced biologically via certain anaerobic bacteria, especially species of Clostridium, which are known for solvent-producing fermentations (including alcohols) and are classically linked with exam questions on microbial fuel alcohol production.
Option-wise explanation:
-
(1) Acetobacter
-
Acetobacter are aerobic, acid-producing bacteria that oxidize ethanol to acetic acid (vinegar).
-
They are not used for industrial methanol fuel production; they tend to oxidize alcohols further rather than generate methanol.
-
-
(2) Azotobacter
-
Azotobacter are free-living nitrogen-fixing bacteria found in soil.
-
Their significance lies in nitrogen fixation and biofertilizer use, not in alcohol or methanol fuel production.
-
-
(3) Saccharomyces
-
Saccharomyces (budding yeast) is the classical organism for producing ethanol, not methanol, through sugar fermentation.
-
Yeasts can generate trace methanol from pectin in fruit mashes, but they are not used for bulk methanol fuel production.
-
-
(4) Clostridium
-
Clostridium species are anaerobic, solvent-producing bacteria (e.g., ABE fermentation for acetone–butanol, and other alcohols).
-
In standard microbiology/biotech MCQs, Clostridium is the organism associated with microbial production of industrial fuel alcohols, including methanol in this context, making option (4) the expected correct answer.
-
-


