510 BACTERIOLOGY. 



Winogradsky is a short, oval, and frequently almost 

 spherical cell. It divides as usual for bacteria, but 

 there is little tendency for the daughter-cells to adhere 

 together or to form chains. In cultures they are com- 

 monly massed together, by a gelatinous material, in the 

 form of zooglcEa. They do not form spores, and are 

 probably not motile, though Winogradsky believes 

 he has occasionally detected them in active motion. 

 As has been stated, they do not grow vipon ordinary 

 nutrient media, and cannot, therefore, be isolated by 

 the means commonly employed to separate different 

 species of bacteria. The most astonishing property of 

 this organism is its ability to grow and perform its 

 specific fermentative function in solutions devoid of 

 organic matter. It is believed to be able to obtain its 

 necessary carbon from carbonic acid. For its isolation 

 and cultivation Winogradsky recommends the following 

 solution : 



Ammonium sulphate ... . 1 gramme. 



Potassium phosphate . . . 1 " 



Pure water . 1000 c.c. 



To each flask containing 100 c.c. of this fluid is added 

 from 0.5 to 1 gramme of basic magnesium carbonate 

 suspended in a little distilled water and sterilized by 

 boiling. One of the flasks is then to be inoculated with 

 a minute portion of the soil under investigation, and 

 after four or five days a small portion is to be with- 

 drawn, by means of a eapillary pipette, from over the 

 surface of the layer of magnesium carbonate and trans- 

 ferred to a second flask, and similarly after four or five 

 days from this to a third flask, and so on. As this 

 medium does not offer conditions favorable to the 



