CHAPTER XT. MODE OF LIFE OF THE BACTERIA. 485 



which to ground the assumption ; but enough is known for the determination of the 

 practical question of protective inoculation by means of the attenuated Bacillus. We 

 cannot however enter further into this point here, but must refer the reader to medical 

 works on the subject. 



Be this as it may, it is easy to conceive, in the case of a facultative parasite which 

 is able to adapt itself to nutrient solutions of different concentration and qualitative 

 composition at a temperature of i5-2oC. and to the blood of a mammal at one of 

 37-4o C., that changes in the adaptation and food may be followed by changes in the 

 deleterious effects, which may be supposed to be due to the production of some kind 

 of ferment. An analogous though quantitatively different case is that of Sclerotinia 

 Sclerotiorum described on page 380, in which the capacity for a parasitic life depends 

 on the food supplied to the plant in its young state. We may also compare the 

 Mucorini (page 358), which vary their form and the decomposition which they 

 produce with the medium in which they live, and the Bacterium described by 

 Wortmann 1 , which gives rise to a ferment capable of dissolving starch if it is supplied 

 with nothing but starch-grains for its food, but ceases to produce the ferment if fed 

 with carbohydrates in solution or with ammonium acetate. 



In the foregoing description it has been tacitly assumed that Bacillus Anthracis 

 is a distinct species, and the present state of our knowledge requires the assumption. 

 The Bacillus of anthrax has a resemblance to other species, and among them to 

 Bacillus subtilis, which is not a facultative parasite or at least may under certain 

 conditions be a harmless parasite ; it varies also in the breadth and length of its cells 

 and in other respects; but it always remains within the limits of the specific 

 characters, the most important of which are given on page 466, and which distinguish 

 it from other species and especially from B. subtilis also described above. 



Buchner has maintained, in opposition to this view, that the Bacillus of anthrax 

 and the hay-bacillus may be made to pass one into the other by breeding, and that 

 they are therefore only states of one and the same species. He has not supplied us 

 with the strictly morphological proof necessary to establish this opinion, since he has 

 not taken into consideration the behaviour of the spores of his altered forms 

 in germination, at least in his published communications, and yet this is one of the 

 characteristic marks of distinction. He adopted also the macroscopic mode of 

 cultivation, in which it is not possible to ensure an uninterrupted control of the 

 continuity of the development, or of the accidental mingling of different species. 

 His transformation of the virulent Bacillus of anthrax into the supposed innocuous 

 hay-bacillus was effected in cultures at a high temperature and with a more 

 than ordinary supply of oxygen; the temperature was 36C., the apparatus 

 employed ensured constant shaking in air, and the solution contained 0.5 per cent, 

 of meat-extract. The transformation was not obtained at a temperature of 2gC. 

 and when the apparatus was not kept in motion. It was evidently Pasteur's inno- 

 cuous state which was produced in this case, but that is by no means Bacillus 

 subtilis. The results of the reverse transformation appear, according to Buchner's 

 own account, extremely doubtful. Now that the facultative parasitism and the 

 possible change of virulence in Bacillus Anthracis have been demonstrated, and since 



Zeitschrift f. physiol. Chemie, VI, p. 287. 



