GHAPTEE II. 



Morphology! of bacteria— Grouping— Mode of multiplication- Spore-forma- 

 tion— Motility. 



In .structure the bacteria are unicellular; they are seen 

 to occur as spherical, rod- or spiral-shaped bodies. They 

 always develop from pre-existing cells of the same char- 

 acter and never appear spontanc(5Usly. 



The classifications of the oldrr authors and of the 

 botanists are usually upon purely morphological pecu- 

 liarities, and, because of slight variations that are seen 

 to occur in the size and shape of one and the same 

 species, are more or less complicated. The present 

 tendency is to simplify this morphological classification, 

 and to bring the bacteria into three great groups, with 

 their subdivisions, the members of each group being 

 determined by their individual outline, viz., that of a 

 sphere, a rod, or a spiral. 



To these three grand divisions are giv^en the names 

 cocci or micrococci, bacilli, and spirilla. 



In the group miorocoeci belong all spherical forms, 

 i. e., all those forms the isolated individual members of 

 which are practically of the same diameter in all direc- 

 tions. (See Fig. 1, a, b, c, d.) 



The bacilli comprise all oval or rod-formed bacteria. 

 (See Fig. 2.) 



To the spirilla belong all organisms that are curved 



1 Morpliology :— pertaining to shape, outline, structure. 



