Parasporobacterium is a genus of bacterium that has been isolated from freshwater sediments and DNA sequences matching this genus have been found in gut microbiome studies.
Parasporobacterium paucivorans is the only known species of the genus Parasporobacterium. P. paucivorans was isolated from freshwater sediments at the Dekkerswald Institute, Nijmegen, The NetherlandsNetherlands and in 2001 was reported as an obligately anaerobic bacterium with an unusual metabolism. P. paucivorans produces methanethiol (MT) and dimethyl sulfide (DMS), volatile organic sulfur compounds (VOSC), from methoxylated aromatic compounds in a sulfide-dependent manner. VOCSs are part of the global sulfur cycle where microorganisms produce them and photochemical oxidation occurring in the atmosphere converts them into other compounds which have roles in global warming, acid precipitation and cloud formation. Further descriptions of P. paucivorans include that it is double rod-shaped and Gram-negative. The type strain is SYR1 and phylogenetic and taxonomic analysis using a fragment of the rRNA gene shows highest similarity to Sporobacterium olearium and falls within subclass XIVa of order Clostridiales.